Last week, TSMC issued their Q4 and full-year 2022 earnings reports for the company. Besides confirming that TSMC was closing out a very busy, very profitable year for the world's top chip fab – booking almost $34 billion in net income for the year – the end-of-year report from the company has also given us a fresh update on the state of TSMC's various fab projects.

The big news coming out of TSMC for Q4'22 is that TSMC has initiated high volume manufacturing of chips on its N3 (3nm-class) fabrication technology. The ramp of this node will be rather slow initially due to high design costs and the complexities of the first N3B implementation of the node, so the world's largest foundry does not expect it to be a significant contributor to its revenue in 2023. Yet, the firm will invest tens of billions of dollars in expanding its N3-capable manufacturing capacity as eventually N3 is expected to become a popular long-lasting family of production nodes for TSMC.

Slow Ramp Initially

"Our N3 has successfully entered volume production in late fourth quarter last year as planned, with good yield," said C. C. Wei, chief executive of TSMC. "We expect a smooth ramp in 2023 driven by both HPC and smartphone applications. As our customers' demand for N3 exceeds our ability to supply, we expect the N3 to be fully utilized in 2023."

Keeping in mind that TSMC's capital expenditures in 2021 and 2022 were focused mostly on expanding its N5 (5nm-class) manufacturing capacities, it is not surprising that the company's N3-capable capacity is modest. Meanwhile, TSMC does not expect N3 to account for any sizable share of its revenue before Q3.

In fact, the No. 1 foundry expects N3 nodes (which include both baseline N3 and relaxed N3E that is set to enter HVM in the second half of 2023) to account for maybe 4% - 6% of the company's wafer revenue in 2023. And yet this would exceed the contribution of N5 in its first two quarters of HVM in 2020 (which was about $3.5 billion).

"We expect [sizable N3 revenue contribution] to start in third quarter 2023 and N3 will contribute mid-single-digit percentage of our total wafer revenue in 2023," said Wei. "We expect the N3 revenue in 2023 to be higher than N5 revenue in its first year in 2020."

Many analysts believe that the baseline N3 (also known as N3B) will be used by Apple either exclusively or almost exclusively, which is TSMC's largest customer that is willing to adopt leading-edge nodes ahead of all other companies, despite high initial costs. If this assumption is correct and Apple is indeed the primary customer to use baseline N3, then it is noteworthy that TSMC mentions both smartphone and HPC (a vague term that TSMC uses to describe virtually all ASICs, CPUs, GPUs, SoCs, and FPGAs not aimed at automotive, communications, and smartphones) applications in conjunction with N3 in 2023. 

N3E Coming in the Second Half

One of the reasons why many companies are waiting for TSMC's relaxed N3E technology (which is entering HVM in the second half of 2023, according to TSMC) is the higher performance and power improvements, as well as even more aggressive logic scaling. Another is that the process will offer lower costs, albeit at the cost of a lack of SRAM scaling compared to N5, according to analysts from China Renaissance.

"N3E, with six fewer EUV layers than the baseline N3, promises simpler process complexity, intrinsic cost and manufacturing cycle time, albeit with less density gain," Szeho Ng, an analyst with China Renaissance, wrote in a note to clients this week. 

Advertised PPA Improvements of New Process Technologies
Data announced during conference calls, events, press briefings and press releases
  TSMC
N3
vs
N5
N3E
vs
N5
Power -25-30% -34%
Performance +10-15% +18%
Logic Area

Reduction* %

Logic Density*
0.58x

-42%

1.7x
0.625x

-37.5%

1.6x
SRAM Cell Size 0.0199µm² (-5% vs N5) 0.021µm² (same as N5)
Volume
Manufacturing
Late 2022 H2 2023

Ho says that TSMC's original N3 features up to 25 EUV layers and can apply multi-patterning for some of them for additional density. By contract, N3E supports up to 19 EUV layers and only uses single-patterning EUV, which reduces complexity, but also means lower density.

"Clients' interest in the optimized N3E (post the baseline N3B ramp-up, which is largely limited to Apple) is high, embracing compute-intensive applications in HPC (AMD, Intel), mobile (Qualcomm, Mediatek) and ASICs (Broadcom, Marvell)," wrote Ho.

It looks like N3E will indeed be TSMC's main 3nm-class working horse before N3P, N3S, and N3X arrive later on.

Tens of Billions on N3

While TSMC's 3nm-class nodes are going to earn the company a little more than $4 billion in 2023, the company will spend tens of billions of dollars expanding its fab capacity to produce chips on various N3 nodes. This year the company's capital expenditures are guided to be between $32 billion - $36 billion. 70% of that sum will be used on advanced process technologies (N7 and below), which includes N3-capable capacity in Taiwan, as well as equipment for Fab 21 in Arizona (N4, N5 nodes). Meanwhile 20% will be used for fabs producing chips on specialty technologies (which essentially means a variety of 28nm-class processes), and 10% will be spent on things like advanced packaging and mask production.

Spending at least $22 billion on N3 and N5 capacity indicates that TSMC is confident on the demand for these nodes. And there is a good reason for that: the N3 family of process technologies is set to be TSMC's last FinFET-based family of production nodes for complex high-performance chips. The company's N2 (2nm-class) manufacturing process will rely on nanosheet-based gate-all-around field-effect transistors (GAAFETs). In fact, analyst Szeho Ng from China Renaissance believes that a significant share of this year's CapEx set for advanced technologies will be spent on N3 capacity, setting the ground for roll-out of N3E, N3P, N3X, and N3S. Since N3-capable fabs can also produce chips on N5 processes, TSMC will be able to use this capacity where there will be significant demand for N5-based chips as well.

"TSMC guided 2023 CapEx at $32-36bn (2022: US$36.3bn), with its expansion focused on N3 in Fab 18 (Tainan)," the analyst wrote in a note to clients. 

Since TSMC's N2 process technology will only ramp starting in 2026, N3 will indeed be a long lasting node for the company. Furthermore, since it will be the last FinFET-based node for advanced chips, it will be used for many years to come as not all applications will need GAAFETs.

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  • lefty2 - Tuesday, January 17, 2023 - link

    N2 starts ramping up in 2024, not 2026.
    This is a quote from the earning call:
    "our N2 technology development is on track, actually is better than what we thought. We have very good progress recently, and our risk production will be in 2024 and volume production in 2025. "
  • Doug_S - Wednesday, January 18, 2023 - link

    Unless they have pulled it in, IIRC they have been talking about H2 2025 for volume production. N3 was H2 2022 for volume production, which ended up being December, with customer shipments / revenue not happening until 2023.

    So saying "2026" is probably not unreasonable. It is certainly 2026 from Apple's perspective unless it gets pulled into H1 2025.
  • lefty2 - Wednesday, January 18, 2023 - link

    dude, he clearly says 2025. It didn't get pulled in, it was always was 2025.

    https://seekingalpha.com/article/4569491-taiwan-se...
  • mattbe - Tuesday, January 24, 2023 - link

    Risk production is not the same as "ramping up". That's just completely wrong. Volume production in 2025 means an actual product that contains chips under this node would appear in late 2025 or 2026.
  • Search Engine Optimization - Wednesday, January 18, 2023 - link

    Runways on this tech are so looooong. This does help us plan for our own cap ex for devices!
  • JKflipflop98 - Thursday, January 19, 2023 - link

    It is indeed an incredibly long run-up to release of a product. I've been in R&D for 25 years now. The processes/devices I work with daily won't be a product on the shelf that you can buy for 6-8 years. We tend to think of tech as constantly evolving and changing, and that is true, but there's also so long-standing plans that have to come to fruition for that to happen.
  • Threska - Friday, January 20, 2023 - link

    Who knew a crashed UFO could yield so much. :-)
  • FunBunny2 - Friday, January 20, 2023 - link

    Who knew a crashed UFO could yield so much. :-)

    "I want to believe"
    -- Fox Mulder/1993
  • escksu - Monday, January 23, 2023 - link

    Current progress is becoming unsustainable and progress will slow down quite significantly. TSMC has been pushing out new nodes every 2-3yrs. But price has been going up as well. Companies are passing this cost to consumers. We have reached a point where consumers are no longer upgrading regularly and rejecting latest hardware due to cost (Ryzen is a good example, 5000 series are still selling very well due to much lower platform cost).

    Another point is that not everything requires the latest process.... There arent that many chips that requires even 7nm, let alone 5nm or 3nm.
  • FunBunny2 - Monday, January 23, 2023 - link

    "There arent that many chips that requires even 7nm, let alone 5nm or 3nm. "

    from your mouth to God's ear.

    "Bear in mind the majority of chips in the things you use are not state-of-the-art 10, 7, or 5nm parts – they're using larger, older nodes. Fabs turning out 14 and 5nm chips aren't helping products that just need 130nm microcontrollers, 45nm embedded processors, and so on.

    It's fortunate, then, that TI is investing in its capacity to churn out analog and embedded electronics using 45nm to 130nm process nodes."

    https://www.theregister.com/2022/01/26/texas_instr...

    aren't those the nodes that we were supposed to get for all that high endurance 3D NAND?? just kidding.

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