Photo Credit: Apple 62m2c
iPhone 17 is the purported successor to iPhone 16 and may be powered by Apple's 3nm SoC
TSMC. Thus, the chips are yet to be certified for mass production and the application process (AP) period for 2nm chips for iPhone may be delayed to 2026.
According to a Samsung Electronics, it is still struggling with wafer yield.
The report suggests that customers will have to shell out more money as the 2nm process is yet to be properly demonstrated and demand for testing is seeing an increase. However, the company aims to invest in expanding its facility for the production of approximately 1,30,000 units in 2026 at the wafer-based 10,000 level. Through facility investment in Arizona, it is reported to have plans for increasing productivity by 20,000 units to a total of 1,40,000 units worldwide.
As per a previous report, TSMC's 2nm chip has a stable yield of 60 percent but customers may have to pay up to $30,000 (roughly Rs. 26,000) per wafer. To address this, Apple reportedly aims to stick with the 3nm chipset for its purported iPhone 17 series in 2025 as it provides time for TSMC to improve its yield.
Although TSMC is Apple's sole chip supplier for the iPhone and Mac, it also serves other clients such as Qualcomm. The two companies are also said to be in talks with Samsung Electronics if the situation does not improve.
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