data:post.title TSMC's 1.6nm Technology Announced for Late 2026: A16 with "Super Power Rail" Backside Power <p>With the arrival of spring comes showers, flowers, and in the technology industry, TSMC&#39;s annual technology symposium series. With customers spread all around the world, the Taiwanese pure play foundry has adopted an interesting strategy for updating its customers on its fab plans, holding a series of symposiums from Silicon Valley to Shanghai. Kicking off the series every year &ndash; and giving us our first real look at TSMC&#39;s updated foundry plans for the coming years &ndash; is the Santa Clara stop, where yesterday the company has detailed several new technologies, ranging from more advanced lithography processes to massive, wafer-scale chip packing options.</p> <p>Today we&#39;re publishing several stories based on TSMC&#39;s different offerings, starting with TSMC&#39;s marquee announcement: their A16 process node. Meanwhile, for the rest of our symposium stories, please be sure to check out the related reading below, and check back for additional stories.</p> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21369/tsmcs-16nm-technology-announced-for-late-2026-a16-with-super-power-rail-bspdn">TSMC&#39;s 1.6nm Technology Announced for Late 2026: A16 with &quot;Super Power Rail&quot; Backside Power</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21370/tsmc-2nm-update-n2-in-2025-n2p-loses-bspdn-nanoflex-optimizations">TSMC 2nm Update: N2 In 2025, N2P Loses Backside Power, and NanoFlex Brings Optimal Cells</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21371/tsmc-preps-lower-cost-4nm-n4c-process-for-2025">TSMC Preps Cheaper 4nm N4C Process For 2025, Aiming For 8.5% Cost Reduction</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21372/tsmcs-system-on-wafer-platform-goes-3d-cow-sow">TSMC&#39;s System-on-Wafer Platform Goes 3D: CoW-SoW Stacks Up the Chips</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21373/tsmc-adds-silicon-photonics-coupe-roadmap-128tbps-on-package">TSMC Jumps Into Silicon Photonics, Lays Out Roadmap For 12.8 Tbps COUPE On-Package Interconnect</a></li> <li><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21375/tsmc-readies-8x-reticle-size-super-carrier-interposer">TSMC Readies 8x Reticle Super Carrier Interposer For Next-Gen Chips Twice as Large As Today&#39;s</a></li> </ul> <p>Headlining its Silicon Valley stop, TSMC announced its first &#39;angstrom-class&#39; process technology: A16. Following a production schedule shift that has seen backside power delivery network technology (BSPDN) removed from TSMC&#39;s N2P node, the new 1.6nm-class production node will now be the first process to introduce&nbsp;BSPDN to TSMC&#39;s chipmaking repertoire. With the addition of backside power capabilities and other improvements, TSMC expects A16 to offer significantly improved performance and energy efficiency compared to TSMC&#39;s N2P fabrication process. It will be available to TSMC&#39;s clients starting H2 2026.</p> <h3>TSMC A16: Combining GAAFET With Backside Power Delivery</h3> <p>At a high level, TSMC&#39;s A16 process technology will rely on gate-all-around (GAAFET) nanosheet transistors and will feature a backside power rail, which will both improve power delivery and moderately increase transistor density. Compared to TSMC&#39;s N2P fabrication process, A16 is expected to offer a performance improvement of 8% to 10% at the same voltage and complexity, or a 15% to 20% reduction in power consumption at the same frequency and transistor count. TSMC is not listing detailed density parameters this far out, but the company says that chip density will increase by 1.07x to 1.10x &ndash; keeping in mind that transistor density heavily depends on the type and libraries of transistors used.</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/21369/tsmcs-16nm-technology-announced-for-late-2026-a16-with-super-power-rail-bspdn"><img alt="" src="https://images.anandtech.com/doci/21369/tsmc-a16-spr.png" style="width: 100%;" /></a></p> <p>The key innovation of TSMC&#39;s A16 node, is its Super Power Rail (SPR) backside power delivery network, a first for TSMC. The contract chipmaker claims that A16&#39;s SPR is specifically tailored for high-performance computing products that feature both complex signal routes and dense power circuitry.</p> <p>As noted earlier, with this week&#39;s announcement, A16 has now become the launch vehicle for backside power delivery at TSMC. The company was <a href="https://www.anandtech.com/show/18832/tsmc-outlines-2nm-plans-n2p-brings-backside-power-delivery-in-2026-n2x-added-to-roadmap">initially slated to offer BSPDN technology with N2P in 2026</a>, but for reasons that aren&#39;t entirely clear, the tech has been punted from N2P and moved to A16. TSMC&#39;s official timing for N2P in 2023 was always a bit loose, so it&#39;s hard to say if this represents much of a practical delay for BSPDN at TSMC. But at the same time, it&#39;s important to underscore that A16 isn&#39;t just N2P renamed, but rather it will be a di... Semiconductors

Hot Posts

6/recent/ticker-posts

TSMC's 1.6nm Technology Announced for Late 2026: A16 with "Super Power Rail" Backside Power

With the arrival of spring comes showers, flowers, and in the technology industry, TSMC's annual technology symposium series. With customers spread all around the world, the Taiwanese pure play foundry has adopted an interesting strategy for updating its customers on its fab plans, holding a series of symposiums from Silicon Valley to Shanghai. Kicking off the series every year – and giving us our first real look at TSMC's updated foundry plans for the coming years – is the Santa Clara stop, where yesterday the company has detailed several new technologies, ranging from more advanced lithography processes to massive, wafer-scale chip packing options.

Today we're publishing several stories based on TSMC's different offerings, starting with TSMC's marquee announcement: their A16 process node. Meanwhile, for the rest of our symposium stories, please be sure to check out the related reading below, and check back for additional stories.

Headlining its Silicon Valley stop, TSMC announced its first 'angstrom-class' process technology: A16. Following a production schedule shift that has seen backside power delivery network technology (BSPDN) removed from TSMC's N2P node, the new 1.6nm-class production node will now be the first process to introduce BSPDN to TSMC's chipmaking repertoire. With the addition of backside power capabilities and other improvements, TSMC expects A16 to offer significantly improved performance and energy efficiency compared to TSMC's N2P fabrication process. It will be available to TSMC's clients starting H2 2026.

TSMC A16: Combining GAAFET With Backside Power Delivery

At a high level, TSMC's A16 process technology will rely on gate-all-around (GAAFET) nanosheet transistors and will feature a backside power rail, which will both improve power delivery and moderately increase transistor density. Compared to TSMC's N2P fabrication process, A16 is expected to offer a performance improvement of 8% to 10% at the same voltage and complexity, or a 15% to 20% reduction in power consumption at the same frequency and transistor count. TSMC is not listing detailed density parameters this far out, but the company says that chip density will increase by 1.07x to 1.10x – keeping in mind that transistor density heavily depends on the type and libraries of transistors used.

The key innovation of TSMC's A16 node, is its Super Power Rail (SPR) backside power delivery network, a first for TSMC. The contract chipmaker claims that A16's SPR is specifically tailored for high-performance computing products that feature both complex signal routes and dense power circuitry.

As noted earlier, with this week's announcement, A16 has now become the launch vehicle for backside power delivery at TSMC. The company was initially slated to offer BSPDN technology with N2P in 2026, but for reasons that aren't entirely clear, the tech has been punted from N2P and moved to A16. TSMC's official timing for N2P in 2023 was always a bit loose, so it's hard to say if this represents much of a practical delay for BSPDN at TSMC. But at the same time, it's important to underscore that A16 isn't just N2P renamed, but rather it will be a di... Semiconductors

Post a Comment

0 Comments