This is important because as the process node number drops, the transistors used on these chips become smaller allowing more of them to be shoehorned inside a chip. And the larger the number of transistors inside a chip, the more powerful and/or energy-efficient that chip is.
Cannon’s NIL machine could help China’s SMIC produce 5nm chipsets for Huawei
But if Canon isn’t banned from shipping NIL machines to SMIC, all of a sudden the foundry might be able to produce 5nm chips bringing the country closer to the 3nm components that TSMC and Samsung Foundry are rolling off their assembly line this year. TSMC’s 3nm node is already used to produce the A17 Pro application processor (AP) used with the iPhone 15 Pro line.
Speaking to The Financial Times, Richard Windsor, the head of research company Radio Free Mobile, said, “If nanoimprint technology was a superior technology, I think it would have been up and running by now and in the market in volume.” While he might be right, there could be nothing that stops SMIC from trying to make NIL work so that it can build 5nm Kirin chips for Huawei. After all, Hiroaki Takeishi, chief of Canon’s Optical Products Operations, told the Financial Times that NIL technology will allow for the creation of simple, low-cost, cutting-edge chips. That sounds exactly like what SMIC has in mind.
Current U.S. export rules prevent foundries using American technology from shipping cutting-edge chips to Huawei without obtaining a license and Takeishi says that he is eager for Canon to start shipping its NIL machines in 2024 and 2025.
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