If everything goes well, Samsung could end up becoming the first foundry in the world to deliver 2nm chips, beating TSMC
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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus March 29, 10:12 PM
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The troubles that Samsung experienced with its 3-nm GAA technology have not been repeated with its 2-nm GAA node. At least, so far, hinting that Samsung Foundry may have finally managed to overcome the SNAFUs, making it lose its edge in this race. The trial production run of its Exynos 2600 on the 2-nm GAA yields has reached 30% and could be near ready to commence full-scale wafer production, depending on whether it can scale those yields to acceptable levels. No telling how much Samsung’s 2nm GAA yields have improved since its pilot build had touched 30%, but the Exynos 2600 prototype is to be fabbed and enter production in May this year. This head start will give Samsung the necessary breathing room to ensure that it can slowly improve its yields and make mass production viable. Bare minimum, the 2-nm GAA node needs at least a yield of 70% to start accepting customer orders. Exynos 2600's design needs to be completed by Q3 2025 to have a sliver of a chance of finding a place in the upcoming Galaxy S26 series. Even if Samsung can get an edge against TSMC regarding the launch timeline, Samsung has held this advantage before when it announced the 1st-gen 3-nm GAA node back in 2022, nothing is guaranteed when comparing yields, especially when history can repeat itself.