Samsung celebrates the first shipment of 3nm Gate-All-Around chips

Peter, 25 July 2022

Samsung began the manufacture of chips using the 3nm Gate-All-Around (GAA) process last month and today it held a ceremony to celebrate the first shipment of such chips.

The ceremony was attended by around 100 people, including company executives and employees, CEOs of companies looking to use the new tech as well as Lee Chang-yang, the Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy, who pledged support for the country’s semiconductor ecosystem.

 Samsung Electronics CEO, Minister Lee Chang-yang and CEO of Samsung Electronics' Foundry Division Left to right: Samsung Electronics CEO, Minister Lee Chang-yang and CEO of Samsung's Foundry Division

Samsung Electronics started researching GAA transistors in the early 2000s and experimenting with the design in 2017. Now it is ready to mass produce chips using the new process.

Compared to the FinFET design, which has been the standard for several years, the Gate-All-Around design allows transistors to carry more current while staying relatively small.

According to Samsung, the 3nm GAA chips will use 45% less power, be 23% faster and be 16% smaller compared to a similar 5nm FinFET chip. This is for the first generation of the GAA process, by the way, Gen 2 will further improve on these metrics.

The evolution of FET transistors - Samsung uses the MBCFET design for its 3nm chips The evolution of FET transistors - Samsung uses the MBCFET design for its 3nm chips

Samsung doesn’t say what kind of chips were stocked up for the first shipment, but the company does plan to develop smartphone chipsets using the 3nm GAA design.

TSMC will also start the mass manufacture of 3nm chips later this year, though they will still use the FinFET design – the company will make the switch to GAAFET with the transition to a 2nm node.

Source (in Korean) | Via


Related

Reader comments

Its funny they can't manufacture Exnos chips with efficient 3 or 4nm

  • Brandon
  • 29 Jul 2022
  • StU

I can't tell if you're trolling or just talking about things you don't understand. It's the transistor size so it's always going to make a difference. A 7nm chip with the same number of transistors as a 10nm chip will be more...

  • AnonD-864404
  • 26 Jul 2022
  • XUY

No

Popular articles

More

Popular devices

Electric Vehicles

More