Samsung’s foundry business chief Choi Si-young unveils a new chipmaking roadmap at Samsung Foundry Forum (SFF) 2023 in the US in June (Courtesy of Samsung Electronics) Canadian chip-designing unicorn Tenstorrent Inc. has become a new foundry customer of Samsung Electronics Co., the world’s second-biggest foundry that has been actively expanding its partnerships with fabless artificial intelligence chip startups amid the AI boom.
The Toronto-based fabless AI chip developer announced on Sunday that Samsung Electronics will mass-produce its RISC-V central processing unit (CPU) and AI acceleration chiplets from the Korean semiconductor giant’s new foundry fab in Taylor, Texas, using the SF4X process, or 4-nanometer (nm) node.
The latest order comes after Tenstorrent’s Chief Executive Jim Keller hinted at the startup’s move to deepen its collaboration with the Korean chip giant during the Samsung Foundry Forum in the US in June.
Tenstorrent, which became a unicorn, or a privately held startup valued at over $1 billion, in 2021, closed a $100 million strategic financing from Samsung and other financial backers such as Hyundai Motor Group and various venture capitals in August.
The Korean chip giant has been actively forging partnerships with fabless AI chip startups at home and abroad amid the ongoing AI craze, which is expected to help Samsung Electronics narrow the gap with its bigger foundry rival Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s biggest foundry.
Samsung Electronics, which is the world's top memory chip maker, is the world’s No. 2 foundry company, trailing far behind TSMC.
Its new foundry in Taylor, Texas is scheduled to kick off mass production in the second half of 2024.
JIM KELLER’S TENSTORRENT
Tenstorrent founded in 2016 is led by top chip designer Jim Keller, who previously worked at Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD ) and Intel Corp.
Tenstorrent's Wormhole Two Chip (Courtesy of Tenstorrent) Its next-generation AI chiplets to be built by Samsung Electronics are designed to deliver scalable power from milliwatts to megawatts, catering to a wide range of applications ranging from edge devices such as mobile devices to data centers.
A chiplet is a sub-processing unit composed of multiple chips on a tiny integrated circuit, and its demand is growing rapidly amid the ongoing AI boom because it can improve chip performance significantly while consuming less power.
"Tenstorrent's focus is on developing high-performance compute and delivering these solutions to customers around the world," Tenstorrent CEO Keller was quoted as saying in the company’s press release.
"Samsung's advanced silicon manufacturing nodes will accelerate Tenstorrent's innovations in RISC-V and AI for data center and automotive solutions,” said Marco Chisari, head of Samsung's US Foundry business.
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