According to TrendForce, HiSilicon, a subsidiary of Huawei, has made significant strides in the independent R&D of AI chips, launching the next-gen Ascend 910B. These chips are utilized not only in Huawei’s public cloud infrastructure but also sold to other Chinese companies.
TrendForce conjectures that the next-generation Ascend 910B chip is likely manufactured using SMIC’s N+2 process. However, the production faces two potential risks. Firstly, as Huawei recently focused on expanding its smartphone business, the N+2 process capacity at SMIC is almost entirely allocated to Huawei’s smartphone products, potentially limiting future capacity for AI chips. Secondly, SMIC remains on the Entity List, possibly restricting access to advanced process equipment.
Market analysis indicates that the Ascend 910B’s performance slightly lags behind the A800 series and its software ecosystem significantly differs from NVIDIA’s CUDA, impacting usage efficiency. However, considering the potential expansion of U.S. restrictions, Chinese manufacturers might be compelled to shift towards the Ascend 910B. There remains considerable potential for China to improve and establish a complete AI ecosystem.
US sanctions drive investment in chip autonomy
After Alibaba’s acquisition of CPU IP supplier Zhongtian Micro Systems in April 2018 and the establishment of T-Head Semiconductor in September of the same year, the company began developing its own ASIC AI chips, including the Hanguang 800. TrendForce reports that T-Head’s initial ASIC chips were co-designed with external companies like GUC. However, after 2023, Alibaba is expected to increasingly leverage its internal resources to enhance the independent design capabilities of its next-gen ASIC chips, primarily for Alibaba Cloud’s AI infrastructure.
China’s high-end chip development is limited
Beyond the 2023 U.S. sanctions, the latter half of 2022 saw significant restrictions on EDA semiconductor design software tools, particularly affecting the design of advanced processes like Samsung’s 3nm or TSMC’s 2nm technologies. Although the mainstream market chips, such as NVIDIA’s A100 and AMD’s MI200, are based on the 6/7nm process, and upcoming models like NVIDIA H100 and AMD MI300 series are expected to shift to 4/5nm processes by 2024, TrendForce forecasts that, despite EDA restrictions not having an immediate significant impact in the short term, they will pose long-term challenges for China in adopting more advanced processes and in the development of next-gen, higher-performance HPC or AI chips.