Home GADGETS Intel puts 1nm process (10A) on the roadmap for 2027 — also...

Intel puts 1nm process (10A) on the roadmap for 2027 — also plans for fully AI-automated factories with ‘Cobots’

Intel puts 1nm process (10A) on the roadmap for 2027 — also plans for fully AI-automated factories with ‘Cobots’

We’ve already covered the first major announcements from the Intel Foundry Direct Connect event, but it turns out that Intel miscommunicated about a presentation that was thought to be under NDA — now Intel says the presentation is open to be reported to the public, so we have some more news to share: Intel’s previously-unannounced Intel 10A (analogous to 1nm) will enter production/development in late 2027, marking the arrival of the company’s first 1nm node, and its 14A (1.4nm) node will enter production in 2026. The company is also working to create fully autonomous AI-powered fabs in the future.

Intel’s Keyvan Esfarjani, the company’s EVP and GM and Foundry Manufacturing and Supply, held a very insightful session that covered the company’s latest developments and showed how the roadmap unfolds over the coming years.

Here, we can see two charts, with the first outlining the company’s K-WSPW (thousands of wafer starts per week) for Intel’s various process nodes. You’ll notice there isn’t a label for the Y-axis, which would give us a direct read on Intel’s production volumes. However, this does give us a solid idea of the proportionality of Intel’s planned node production over the next several years.

Intel did not specify the arrival date of its coming 14A node in its previous announcements, but here, the company indicates it will begin production of the Intel 14A node in 2026.

Even more importantly, Intel will begin production/development of its as-yet-unannounced 10A node in late 2027, filling out its roster of nodes produced with EUV technology. Intel’s ‘A’ suffix in its node naming convention represents Angstroms, and 10 Angstroms converts to 1nm, meaning this is the company’s first 1nm-class node.

Intel hasn’t shared any details about the 10A/1nm node but has told us that it classifies a new node as at least having a double-digit power/performance improvement. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger has told us the cutoff for a new node is around a 14% to 15% improvement, so we can expect that 10A will have at least that level of improvement over the 14A node. (For example, the difference between Intel 7 and Intel 4 was a 15% improvement.)

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