TSMC working on 3nm semiconductor plant in Taiwan

If successful, firm would pull ahead of IBM

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co - TSMC - has announced it is building the first ever semiconductor plant in the world that will be able to support the creation of 3nm node silicon chips.

While the company has been talking about building the 3nm fab for a while, recent rumours seemed to give the impression that building would take place in the US, after President Donald Trump's claims that more digital manufacturing was welcome in the country.

However, TSMC has made it clear, according to Digitimes, that it wishes to stay in Taiwan at the Tainan Science Park to "fully leverage the company's exisiting cluster advantage" and see the benefit of a "comprehensive supply chain".

The firm already operates a 5nm fab in the same location, so it's not an illogical leap, though TSMC hasn't started producing 5nm chips yet, its website saying that these are "scheduled to start risk production in the second quarter of 2019".

IBM, meanwhile, have successfully created 5nm silicon chips already, revealing back in June 2017 that they'd used silicon nanosheets in a "Gate All Around" field-effect transistor (GAAFET) setup.

TSMC is continuing to back the 7nm FinFET (Fin Field Effect Transistor) process for 5nm - essentially a "3D" non-planar transistor that resembles a fin. Hence the name.

However, despite the fact that the GAAFET approach could feasibly support the manufacture of 3nm chips, IBM has - probably quite wisely - not elaborated as such, with TSMC's boasts seeming to give the impression that it may get to the hallowed ground first.

For a while, it seemed that 5nm chip manufacture may actually break Moore's Law, but with IBM already pioneering the future there, there seems no reason that given the right production environment, TSMC couldn't pip Big Blue to the post.