China’s top chipmaker achieves breakthrough despite US curbs

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China’s top chipmaker achieves breakthrough despite US curbs
By: Debby Wu and Jenny Leonard
| Jul 21 2022 at 09:54 AM |

Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. has likely advanced its production technology by two generations, defying US sanctions intended to halt the rise of China’s largest chipmaker.

The Shanghai-based manufacturer is shipping Bitcoin-mining semiconductors built using 7-nanometer technology, industry watchers TechInsights wrote in a blog post on Tuesday. That’s well ahead of SMIC’s established 14nm technology, a measure of fabrication complexity in which narrower transistor widths help produce faster and more efficient chips. Since late 2020, the US has barred the unlicensed sale to the Chinese firm of equipment that can be used to fabricate semiconductors of 10nm and beyond, infuriating Beijing.

A person familiar with the developments confirmed the report, asking not to be named as they were not authorized to discuss it publicly. SMIC climbed as much as 1.9% in Hong Kong, while Chinese chip and chip gear stocks including Shanghai Fudan Microelectronics Group Co., Naura Technology Group Co. and Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment Inc. gained more than 5%.

SMIC’s surprising progress raises questions about how effective the export control mechanism has been and whether Washington can indeed thwart China’s ambition to foster a world-class chip industry at home and reduce reliance on foreign technologies. It also comes at a time American lawmakers have urged Washington to close loopholes in its Chinese-oriented curbs and ensure Beijing isn’t supplying crucial technology to Russia.

The restrictions effectively derailed Huawei Technologies Co.’s smartphone business by cutting it off from the tools to compete at the cutting edge -- but that company is now quietly staffing up a renewed effort to develop its in-house chipmaking acumen.

Previously, SMIC has said that its core capabilities stand at 14nm, two generations behind 7nm, which in turn is roughly four years behind the most advanced technology available now from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Samsung Electronics Co. The company has worked with clients on technologies more advanced than 14nm as early as 2020, it said on an earnings call that year.

China-based MinerVa Semiconductor Corp., which is named as SMIC’s customer in the TechInsights report, showcases a 7nm chip on its website and said mass production began in July 2021, without specifying the manufacturer. Dylan Patel, chief analyst at SemiAnalysis, was first to note the report.

Representatives of SMIC and MinerVa didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

The Trump administration blacklisted SMIC about two years ago on national security concerns, citing the company’s ties with the Chinese military, an allegation the chipmaker has denied. Following Washington’s move, American equipment suppliers have been banned from providing the Chinese company with gear “uniquely required” to produce 10nm or more advanced chips without licenses, although it is not clear exactly what the US Department of Commerce has allowed domestic firms to sell to SMIC since.

US Senator Marco Rubio and US Congressman Michael McCaul have repeatedly urged the department to tighten export control restrictions pertaining to SMIC to strengthen US security and ensure China is not transferring technology to Russia and helping Moscow evade sanctions.

“The Biden Administration will continue working to grow and strengthen our cooperation with allies and partners to ensure effective controls on semiconductor production so that we remain generations ahead of competitors in advanced semiconductor technology,” a spokesperson for the Commerce Department said. The National Security Council did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

SMIC has said that its blacklist status hurts its ability to develop sophisticated technologies. The company’s capability is severely curbed by its lack of access to ASML Holding NV’s extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) systems, which are required to make the most advanced chips that include 5nm and 3nm geometries. The Dutch firm has not shipped a single EUV machine to mainland China because of US pressure on the Dutch government.

The administration of President Joe Biden at one point considered tightening restrictions around SMIC but ruled out any unilateral action to allow for more time to negotiate with other trading partners. Those talks have not borne fruit so far. Washington is, however, pushing ASML to stop selling even less advanced gear to China.

SMIC told analysts in mid-2020 that a large share of the equipment it has for 14nm chips can be used to make more advanced chips and it is seeking to develop more sophisticated technology to improve its profitability.

 

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China’s SMIC Beats Sanctions to Make 7nm Chips – TechInsights
July 22, 2022
The discovery has big implications for Chinese chip companies, as it “helps reduce China’s reliance on Western technologies” at a time when it was restricted by US sanctions, the report said
smic_rtrs_-e1658489028494.jpeg

China's largest chipmaker may now have the capacity to make advanced 7nm chips, a tech magazine has revealed. Reuters file image.

China’s largest chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) is now producing highly advanced products, according to a report by TechInsights, which said it appeared to have produced a 7-nanometre chip “that incorporates scaled logic and memory bitcells.”

The Shanghai-based SMIC, which Washington put on the Department of Commerce’s Entity List in late 2020 because of concerns it had ties to the Chinese military, “appears to have used 7nm technology to manufacture the MinerVa Bitcoin Miner system on chip,” the report said, adding that this “has key implications for Chinese chip companies, as it helps to reduce China’s reliance on Western technologies during this time of restricted access.”

 

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MSIC made a micro chip that is two generations ahead of what it is currently capable of making

Chinese military and Huawei, which is being sanctioned by US, will benefit greatly from this new Chinese technological breakthrough.

 

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China edges closer to chips self-sufficiency despite US efforts​

7/26/2022

A natural consequence of the US-led clampdown on China's access to Western technology is a renewed Chinese push for self-sufficiency. If we can't obtain it from the Americans or their allies, we'll have to produce it ourselves, you can envisage Xi Jinping, China's latest emperor, telling his lackeys. Billions of Chinese yuan have reportedly been funnelled into the local semiconductor industry as China pursues technological parity and independence.

The hawkish Western response to these spending plans is to throw back one's head, cackle condescendingly and – when the mock tears of mirth have dried – point out that China is years behind the US on semiconductor innovation. This is how Donald Trump and Joe Biden, with a few doddery strokes of the White House pen, were able to cripple Huawei, cutting the telecom equipment maker off from the bleeding-edge components it needs for smartphones and even some network gear.





A silicon wafer inside one of TSMC's fabs in Taiwan. (Source: TSMC)
A silicon wafer inside one of TSMC's fabs in Taiwan.
(Source: TSMC)​




China's dependency on the West is not immediately obvious. The world's most sophisticated foundries today are Taiwan's TSMC and South Korea's Samsung. But look behind the factory walls and the observer would see rooms full of semiconductor equipment made by US, European and Japanese firms. The electronic design automation (EDA) software used in semiconductor manufacturing is nearly all American. With Huawei, China was previously able to close the technological gap with Western rivals such as Ericsson and Nokia, even overtaking those companies. It has not managed the same feat in chipmaking tools.

So it will alarm US hawks to see that SMIC, a large Chinese foundry, has been able to crank out a chip based on 7-nanometer processes. A nanometer (often abbreviated to nm) is a billionth of a meter and the unit commonly used for measuring the size of the transistors that go into chips. The smaller the process, the more advanced the tech. But this miniaturization is one of the toughest tasks in the industry – so tough that TSMC and Samsung are the only two foundries currently producing 7-nanometer chips.

When DUV will do

The revelation about SMIC comes from an analyst firm called TechInsights, which examined a chip sold by Canada's MinerVa but manufactured by SMIC. The MinerVa Bitcoin Miner SoC, as the product is called, "is the most advanced technology product we have seen from SMIC since we analyzed their 14nm technology," said TechInsights in a report. "This low-volume production product may be the steppingstone for a true 7nm process that incorporates scaled logic and memory bitcells." Widely reported by the mainstream and industry press, the report has been taken seriously by observers.

Many of China's opponents would have assumed SMIC and other Chinese foundries were short of the equipment needed to produce decent 7-nanometer chips. Of utmost importance in the mix are the ultraviolet lithography machines that etch complex, microscopic circuitry into silicon wafers. Only a few companies make these machines, led by ASML of the Netherlands plus Canon and Nikon in Japan. And of those three, ASML has a monopoly in the market for extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography, the latest technology. Denied an export license by its own government, ASML is barred from selling EUV machines to China.

This restriction is justified by the Wassenaar Arrangement, an export control regime designed to prevent certain "dual-use" technologies (meaning technologies with civilian and military purposes) from being shipped to "states of concern," including China. There are 42 members, including Japan, the Netherlands and the US. When it comes to ASML and EUV, the aim would have been to stop China from producing its own state-of-the-art chips.

But there is currently no embargo on the sale of older deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography machines, and ASML's sales to China have soared from about €1.4 billion ($1.4 billion) in 2019 to roughly €2.7 billion ($2.7 billion) last year. They grew again for the recent first half of 2022, rising nearly a fifth, to more than €1.5 billion ($1.5 billion), and accounting for 17% of all company revenues, up from 15% in the year-earlier half.

The impression ASML likes to create is that EUV is required for 7-nanometer and even smaller nodes. Asked by email about the feasibility of producing a 7-nanometer semiconductor with DUV machines, it had not provided a response at the time of publication. But Peter Wennink, ASML's CEO, clearly linked DUV to less advanced chips on the company's recent earnings call.

"I think we need to realize that China is an important player in the semiconductor industry and especially in the more – let's say not mature nodes but in the more mainstream semiconductors," he told analysts. "It's everything that has to do with deep UV, yes. And it ranges from 20-nanometer up to 28, 45, 65."

Yet 7-nanometer chips have already been produced with DUV equipment, according to TechInsights in its recent report. Making them without EUV tools is costlier and more complex, but it does not appear to be impossible. "While all the major foundries manufactured technology at 7nm without EUV, variants on the 7nm node saw significant complexity (and likely cost) reductions with the introduction of EUV," said TechInsights.

Chinese chips for Chinese firms

Regardless, that SMIC – a company on the US trade blacklist (Entity List) – has any kind of 7-nanometer capability is not what China's opponents will want to hear. "For US policymakers, this news will come as a bit of a shock as the US Department of Commerce's idea of putting SMIC on the Entity List was to effectively prevent the company from pursuing advanced process nodes beyond 14nm by restricting their access to ASML's EUV machines," said Leonard Lee, the managing director and founder of next Curve, a US research and advisory firm, in a LinkedIn exchange with Light Reading.

Experts in semiconductor technology might not be surprised by this development. Two years ago, when ASML was trying to obtain an export license for EUV, there had been warnings that SMIC would conceivably be able to rely on DUV technology instead. "In essence, although there are cost benefits of using EUV at 7nm, DUV can readily replicate 7nm patterns," said Robert Castellano, the president of a consulting and advisory group called The Information Network, in an article for Seeking Alpha. His view at the time was that SMIC might already have closed the gap through a system it calls N+1, offering major performance improvements compared with 14-nanometer processes.

But Lee says parts of the industry have been largely dismissive of SMIC's N+1 claims. "Those skeptical of SMIC's abilities deemed that the use of older DUV lithography equipment in pursuit of 7nm would present prohibitive yield issues and challenges economically scaling N+1 production," he told Light Reading.

Nevertheless, for the Chinese market, a costlier and less feature-rich advanced chip is better than no chip at all, and SMIC is now thought to be working on an update called N+2 that would address some of the performance issues associated with N+1. "If SMIC is able to continue improving their N+1 and fabled N+2 manufacturing processes, this is good news for China's semiconductor self-sufficiency aspirations," said Lee.

It would be especially welcome to Huawei. Cut off from TSMC and Samsung by US trade sanctions, it reported a 29% drop in revenues last year, partly because of problems obtaining advanced semiconductors for its smartphones. Although its carrier division is less exposed, the latest baseband equipment in mobile networks relies on both 7-nanometer and 10-nanometer technology, according to Michael Begley, the head of product line 5G RAN compute for Ericsson, Huawei's biggest 5G rival. "As soon as you put computing functions into the radio, you need to be on the latest process node or you are going to have a very big and bulky radio," he previously told Light Reading.

US firms in for hard landing

Concern about SMIC's growing capability might explain why the US is now reported to be seeking restrictions on the sale of DUV technology to China. "I mean, it's been on the table from time to time," said Wennink when asked about that risk on his company's recent earnings call. "We just have to wait for what the politicians come up with."

The thought of a DUV ban now conjures words like "horse," "stable door" and "bolted." What's more, Western semiconductor and component firms have been growing their sales to China in the last few years despite a supposed tightening of US sanctions. Applied Materials, Lam Research and KLA, three US companies that produce fab equipment, made a combined $4.2 billion from sales to China in 2017. Last year, the figure had soared to $14.5 billion. EDA firms Synopsys and Cadence grew China sales from $564 million in 2017 to $941 million last year. While SMIC is on the Entity List, numerous other Chinese semiconductor firms are not. YMTC, a memory chip maker, is thought to count Applied Materials as its biggest supplier.

What US authorities probably don't want to acknowledge is that cutting China off completely would now endanger US tech heavily reliant on Chinese business. Applied Materials, for instance, currently derives a third of its revenues from China and would struggle to maintain research-and-development spending at historical levels if those sales abruptly vanished.

Even if the US does not implement tougher restrictions, the likes of Applied Materials could be in trouble as Chinese foundries opt instead for increasingly capable Chinese suppliers. Castellano, who has been ahead of the curve on this subject, drew attention in a recent Seeking Alpha blog to several Chinese companies that make fab equipment. Applied Materials now faces Chinese competitors in each of its equipment sectors and many sell equipment capable of 5-nanometer patterning, he said.

Nor does he have much sympathy for US policymakers and SEMI, a lobbying group for the semiconductor industry whose members include Applied Materials and ASML. "The greed exemplified by SEMI on behalf of its members and US sanctions have accelerated the determination and resolution for China to excel," he said.

Almost implicit in the US trade restrictions is a view that cutting China off from US technology will hamper its development. But it would be arrogant to think a wealthy superpower of 1.4 billion people can never catch up. The irony is that relatively weak sanctions have convinced China of the need for self-sufficiency while allowing it to continue buying Western expertise. This month's news will stoke US fears that China is closing the gap fast – and that US companies will suffer a hard landing when it does.

 
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