China on cusp of next-generation chip production despite US curbs

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China on cusp of next-generation chip production despite US curbs​

SMIC and Huawei plan to make new 5nm processor, supporting Beijing’s goal for advanced semiconductors

A Kirin 9000s chip


The latest Huawei-designed Kirin processor was a 7-nanometre chip made for it by SMIC that appeared in the Mate 60 Pro smartphone in August. © James Park/Bloomberg

Feburary. 6 2024

China’s national chip champions expect to make next-generation smartphone processors as early as this year, despite US efforts to restrict their development of advanced technologies.

The country’s biggest chipmaker SMIC has put together new semiconductor production lines in Shanghai, according to two people familiar with the move, to mass produce the chips designed by technology giant Huawei.

That plan supports Beijing’s goals of chip self-sufficiency, with President Joe Biden’s administration tightening export restrictions for advanced chipmaking equipment in October, citing national security concerns. The US has also been working with the Netherlands and Japan to block China’s access to the latest chip tools, such as machines from the Dutch maker ASML.

According to two people with knowledge of the plans, SMIC is aiming to use its existing stock of US and Dutch-made equipment to produce more-miniaturised 5-nanometre chips. The production line will make Kirin chips designed by Huawei’s HiSilicon unit and destined for new versions of its premium smartphones.

While 5nm chips remain a generation behind the current cutting-edge 3nm ones, the move would show China’s semiconductor industry is still making gradual progress, despite US export controls.

“With the new 5nm node, Huawei is well on track to upgrade its new flagship handset and data centre chips,” said one person familiar with the plans.

Huawei had surprised the industry and analysts with its advances when its Mate 60 Pro premium smartphone launched in August featuring a 7nm processor. The phone helped it to increase shipments in China by nearly 50 per cent in the fourth quarter, according to Canalys research, as it proved a big hit with consumers.

If production is judged successful enough for smartphones, Huawei’s most powerful artificial intelligence processor, the Ascend 920, will also be produced at 5nm by SMIC, the two people said, narrowing the gap between China’s alternative AI chips and Nvidia’s highly sought-after graphics processing units.

Meanwhile, SMIC has increased its current 7nm production capacity to make more Kirin chips and AI GPUs, said two people familiar with the matter.

Huawei’s 7nm Ascend 910b chip is considered by analysts and industry experts to be among the most promising alternatives to Nvidia’s market-leading AI processors.

The move to create more advanced chips has incurred additional costs, however. Three people close to Chinese chip companies said that SMIC was having to charge 40 to 50 per cent more for products from its 5nm and 7nm fabrication nodes than Taiwan’s TSMC does at the same nodes.

However, SMIC’s yield — the number of chips considered good enough to ship to customers — is also less than one-third of TSMC’s.

“Could this be just a demonstration by Huawei and SMIC to show the Chinese government it can be done?” said Douglas Fuller, an expert on China’s semiconductor industry. “If money is no object, then it might happen.”

Huawei declined to comment. SMIC did not respond to a request for comment.

The 7nm and 5nm chip fabrication lines comprise US machines stockpiled by SMIC before it was hit by the restrictions. Its fab also boasts ASML lithography machines shipped last year.

The Dutch government recently revoked an export licence for some of the most advanced machines, which has blocked ASML from selling to China.

“SMIC is facing a more significant roadblock for production expansion after the US and its alliance tightened export restrictions on advanced chipmaking gear,” said one person close to the company.

“Still, the fate of China’s chip industry and its technological development in the coming years will depend on these production lines by SMIC.”
 
Late Last year 7nm, this year 5nm, this development is pretty impressive.
 

Huawei shrugs off U.S. sanctions to take top place in China’s smartphone market—but its new AI chips might be an even bigger achievement​

Nicholas Gordon
Tue, February 6, 2024 at 8:01 p.m. GMT+8

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CFOTO—Future Publishing via Getty Images

Chinese tech champion Huawei has staged a dramatic comeback, reaching new heights five years after U.S. sanctions cut off the company's supplies of advanced chips.

The company was the top-selling smartphone brand in China in the first two weeks of 2024, according to the South China Morning Post citing a report from research firm Counterpoint Research. The firm noted that it’s the first time Huawei has taken first place since the U.S. put the company on a trade blacklist in 2019. (The U.S. accused Huawei of having ties to China's military, charges the company denies.)

Last August, Huawei returned to the premium smartphone market with the Mate 60 series, featuring an advanced China-manufactured processor. The Kirin processor, made by Chinese chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), is just a few generations behind the most advanced chips used in Apple’s latest iPhone.

State media celebrated the release of the phone as proof of China’s ability to withstand U.S. export controls on sales of advanced chips and chipmaking equipment to Chinese companies.

Huawei’s gain is Apple’s loss. Last quarter, the U.S. tech company reported a 13% drop in sales in Greater China—which includes mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. CEO Tim Cook called China the “most competitive smartphone market in the world” in an interview with Reuters last week.

SMIC, which makes Huawei’s smartphone processors, reported $174.7 million in quarterly net income on Tuesday, ahead of analyst expectations of $139.1 million.

Huawei’s AI chips

Yet Huawei’s ability to sustain its smartphone strengths could be constrained by another one of its successes: the company’s AI chips.

Strong demand for the company’s Ascend AI chips is forcing the company to slow production of its smartphones, Reuters reported Monday, citing unnamed sources. Huawei reportedly uses one facility to produce both its smartphone processors and AI chips, but is struggling with low production yields.

Huawei did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Analysts previously suggested to Fortune that while Huawei’s ability to make an advanced processor given its constraints was impressive, Chinese chip makers will likely struggle to produce more advanced semiconductors in a cost-effective manner.

Still, Chinese companies have embraced Huawei’s chips, which reportedly have capabilities that approach the processors made by market leader Nvidia. The U.S. has stopped Nvidia from selling its most advanced chips to Chinese tech companies, which are embarking on their own arms race to develop generative AI products.

Nvidia continues to develop China-focused chips that comply with U.S. export controls. Yet Chinese companies now think that these weaker chips are no longer significantly better than cheaper domestic options like those made by Huawei, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this year.

In late December, Huawei said it expected to generate almost $100 billion in sales in 2023, which would be an increase from the $92.3 billion it generated in 2022.

 

China's SMIC Could Produce 5nm Chips Despite Trade Restrictions​

The company has reportedly built two new plants to produce the chips.
By Ryan Whitwam February 6, 2024

China SMIC chip

Credit: SMIC

Chinese technology firms have been hamstrung over the past several years as the US has increasingly blocked access to the latest microchips. The country's largest chipmaker, SMIC, surprised everyone with the release of a 7nm processor last year, and now rumors point to a 5nm release. This improvement could advance China's AI ambitions, making the US-led technology blockade look even more ineffective.

Action against Chinese technology giants began during the Trump administration with the addition of companies like Huawei to the government's Entity List, which prevents the transfer of US technology. The Chinese government's solution was to put its full weight behind homegrown chip manufacturing. The Biden administration has further clamped down by restricting China's access to the latest lithography machinery for manufacturing chips, leaving SMIC with technology intended for larger and less efficient process nodes.

SMIC is allegedly on the verge of releasing the new 5nm chips, which have been designed by Huawei's HiSilicon subsidiary. They will be produced in a pair of new factories in Shanghai. The chips will appear first in flagship smartphones, but SMIC has big plans for 5nm if that works. It hopes to produce server chips and AI accelerators at 5nm, which would close the gap between Chinese designs and the latest AI hardware from Nvidia. Like lithography technology firms, Nvidia is barred from exporting most of its AI accelerators to China.

Chinese chip foundries are making do with deep ultraviolet lithography (DUV) machinery. Until late last year, companies in China were still allowed to purchase these devices from companies like ASML.

The more advanced extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) equipment designed for sub-7nm process nodes was already blocked. Despite the equipment shortcomings, SMIC managed to produce the Kirin 9000S (above) in 2023, a 7nm chip that it should not have been able to make. The 9000S wasn't as powerful as the corresponding 2023 chips from Taiwan-based TSMC, but it was a huge leap forward for China's homegrown ARM designs.

Kirin 9000S

Credit: 微机分 WekiHome
SMIC has reportedly modified its DUV machinery with deposition and etching components that allow them to surpass their design limits. These hard-won advances do not come without consequence. Sources tell the Financial Times that SMIC will need to charge 40-50% more than TSMC at the 5nm node. Due to the suboptimal equipment, the yield of usable 5nm chips with SMIC's lithography workarounds is roughly one-third that of TSMC.

Chipmaking experts have warned that attempts to contain Chinese technology firms with trade sanctions are doomed to fail. The country is currently hurting from the loss of Western chips, but the potential military and security applications of advanced chip designs ensure China won't give up.
 

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