TSMC progresses with 2nm manufacturing process, anticipates gradual 
implementation

The ecosystem for the new process is almost ready, with a few missing bits here 
and there

By Alfonso Maruccia Today 8:45 AM 
https://www.techspot.com/news/100481-tsmc-2nm-manufacturing-process-coming-along-but-take.html

TSMC progresses with 2nm manufacturing process, anticipates gradual 
implementation

Forward-looking: TSMC is continuing preparations for its 2nm-class 
manufacturing process technologies. The hardware is progressing well, while 
third-party companies and chip designers will need to adapt to the slew of 
innovations that N2 is bringing to the table.

In the next few years, Taiwanese foundry TSMC will introduce some of the most 
advanced chip manufacturing technologies on the planet.

The 2 nanometer-based N2, N2P, and N2X process tech will include multiple 
innovations, and the entire ecosystem orbiting around the company's silicon 
business is destined to change accordingly.

As noted by AnandTech, N2 and its future iterations should bring a lot of 
improvements to microchips, including a reduction in power consumption 
(-25-30%), more performance (+10-15%) and transistor density (>1.15x) in a 
"mixed" chip configuration (50% logic, 30% SRAM, 20% analog).

Mass manufacturing of 2nm chips should arrive in the second half of 2025, but 
TSMC is working with its customers and partners 2 years in advance because the 
"nanosheet is different."

The N2 process will include innovations such as nanosheet gate-all-around (GAA) 
transistors, backside power delivery, and super-high-performance 
metal-insulator-metal (SHPMIM) capacitors.

TSMC said during its latest Open Innovation Platform forum in Europe that to 
take advantage of such novel technologies, major chip designers need to use new 
electronic design automation (EDA) simulation, verification, and IP tools.

GAA transistors behave differently than FinFET ones, TSMC warned. Therefore, 
chip companies will have to start their design workloads essentially from 
scratch.

Developing new IPs based on the 2nm process upgrade is not "harder," TSMC said, 
just different. Companies will have to adapt to the new tech, just like they 
went from planar transistors to a "3D" (FinFET) design in the past.

Major manufacturers of EDA software (Cadence, Synopsys) have already been 
certified by TSMC to work on N2, and chip developers can start using the new 
tools right away. The most complex part of the 2nm transition involves 
pre-built IP chip designs, because TSMC is still building some blocks to be 
included in the aforesaid designs.

Standard elements such as GPIO/ESD, PLL, SRAM, and ROM are ready both for 
mobile and high-performance computing (HPC) applications. Some components exist 
in form of pre-silicon development kits, while others have already been tested 
in actual hardware. Other N2 blocks such as non-volatile memory, interface IP, 
and chiplet IP are not available yet, which could bottleneck chip design 
efforts.

Third-party companies such as Alphawave, Cadence, Credo, and eMemory are 
already working on them, TSMC said.

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