[News] Apple Not Adopting TSMC 2nm for iPhone 17? A19 Pro Chip Rumored to Use N3P Process – TrendForce
Apple currently uses TSMC’s 3-nanometer process for multiple chipsets. According to a report from wccftech, the iPhone 17 chipset will not adopt the 2-nanometer process. Instead, the A19 Pro chip, expected in 2025, is reportedly maintaining the 3-nanometer technology.
The same report suggests that the Apple A19 Pro chip is considering TSMC’s N3P process and may be featured in the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max. TSMC aims to ramp up its 3-nanometer wafer capacity to 100,000 units by the end of 2024.TSMC began trial production of 2-nanometer chips as early as June 2023. However, Apple’s A18 Pro chip for the iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max might use the N3E process. As for next year’s iPhone 17, its A19 Pro chip is likely to adopt TSMC’s N3P technology.
As per MoneyDJ’s report, it is currently expected that Apple’s iPhone 18 series, slated for release in 2026, will feature the first-ever 2-nanometer chip. Besides Apple, other 2-nanometer customers include Intel, with interest also anticipated from AMD, NVIDIA, and MediaTek. Looking at the process roadmap, this year’s iPhone 16 will use N3E, while next year’s model will adopt N3P. Thus, the first consumer product leveraging TSMC’s 2nm process is anticipated to launch in 2026.
Meanwhile, Apple is said to be striving to stay ahead of competitors and exploring alternative packaging technologies like 3DFabric with its foundry partner. A rumor from the account Yeux1122 has suggested that Apple is already delving into SoIC (Small Outline Integrated Circuit) packaging.
The rumor suggests that TSMC is actively boosting its CoWoS packaging capacity and seeking next-generation SoIC solutions. Apple is reportedly highly interested in utilizing SoIC packaging for mass-producing next-generation AP chips, potentially using hybrid molding (thermoplastic carbon fiber board composite molding technology) for SoIC.
The rumor also indicate that SoIC chips will undergo small-scale trial production, with full-scale production expected as early as 2025-2026.
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