Samsung disclosed performance metrics for its 2-nanometer gate-all-around manufacturing process, revealing modest gains over the previous 3-nanometer node with 5 percent faster speeds, 8 percent better power efficiency, and 5 percent smaller die sizes. The figures fall short of earlier projections that anticipated 12 percent performance increases and 25 percent efficiency improvements.
The South Korean chipmaker has improved production yields from 30 percent to between 50 and 60 percent, enabling expanded wafer output beyond the initial 15,000 monthly units planned for the Exynos 2600 processor. Samsung secured orders from cryptocurrency mining equipment producers MicroBT and Canaan, representing 10 percent of total capacity, while signing a multibillion-dollar agreement with Tesla.
The foundry division holds 7.3 percent of the global market compared with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company's 70.2 percent share, with Samsung targeting profitability by 2027 through its advanced node technology.
The South Korean chipmaker has improved production yields from 30 percent to between 50 and 60 percent, enabling expanded wafer output beyond the initial 15,000 monthly units planned for the Exynos 2600 processor. Samsung secured orders from cryptocurrency mining equipment producers MicroBT and Canaan, representing 10 percent of total capacity, while signing a multibillion-dollar agreement with Tesla.
The foundry division holds 7.3 percent of the global market compared with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company's 70.2 percent share, with Samsung targeting profitability by 2027 through its advanced node technology.