iPhone

TSMC and ARM to Team Up on 7nm Chip Process – On Track for Use in iPhone 8

Apple chipmaking partner Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and chip design firm ARM have announced they’ll be teaming up to create a 7nm FinFET chip fabrication process, possibly going into early production in 2017. The process would go into mass production in 2018, which would allow for using the process to manufacture the “A11” chip for use in Apple’s “iPhone 8.”

“This latest agreement builds on ARM and TSMC’s success with previous generations of 16nm FinFET and 10nm FinFET process technology…”

Apple originally used ARM chips in its iOS devices, later switching to its own custom chip, which still used the ARM instruction set. TSMC has been one of Apple’s two chipmakers, working alongside Samsung to produce the main processors used in Apple’s popular lineup of phones and tablets.

TSMC is rumored to be the sole producer for the A10 chip scheduled for use in the upcoming “iPhone 7” models, due this fall. TSMC is said to have grabbed the entire chipmaking deal from Samsung, due to its 10nm process.

The full announcement is below:

ARM and TSMC Announce Multi-Year Agreement to Collaborate on 7nm FinFET Process Technology for High-Performance Compute

ARM and TSMC announced a multi-year agreement to collaborate on a 7nm FinFET process technology which includes a design solution for future low-power, high-performance compute SoCs. The new agreement expands the companies’ long-standing partnership and advances leading-edge process technologies beyond mobile and into next-generation networks and data centers. Additionally, the agreement extends previous collaborations on 16nm and 10nm FinFET that have featured ARM®Artisan® foundation Physical IP.

“Existing ARM-based platforms have been shown to deliver an increase of up to 10x in compute density for specific data center workloads,” said Pete Hutton, executive vice president and president of product groups, ARM. “Future ARM technology designed specifically for data centers and network infrastructure and optimized for TSMC 7nm FinFET will enable our mutual customers to scale the industry’s lowest-power architecture across all performance points.”

“TSMC continuously invests in advanced process technology to support our customer’s success,” said Dr. Cliff Hou, vice president, R&D, TSMC. “With our 7nm FinFET, we have expanded our Process and Ecosystem solutions from mobile to high performance compute. Customers designing their next generation high-performance computing SoCs will benefit from TSMC’s industry-leading 7nm FinFET, which will deliver more performance improvement at the same power or lower power at the same performance as compared to our 10nm FinFET process node. Jointly optimized ARM and TSMC solutions will enable our customers to deliver disruptive, first-to-market products.”

This latest agreement builds on ARM and TSMC’s success with previous generations of 16nm FinFET and 10nm FinFET process technology. The joint innovations from previous TSMC and ARM collaborations have enabled customers to accelerate their product development cycles and take advantage of leading-edge processes and IP. Recent benefits include early access to Artisan Physical IP and tape-outs of ARM Cortex®-A72 processor on 16nm FinFET and 10nm FinFET.

(Via 9to5Mac)

Chris Hauk

Chris is a Senior Editor at Mactrast. He lives somewhere in the deep Southern part of America, and yes, he has to pump in both sunshine and the Internet.