China's hybrid-bonded AI accelerators could rival Nvidia's Blackwell GPUs — top semiconductor expert hints at 'fully controllable domestic solution'

3 hours ago 4
AMD
(Image credit: AMD)

Wei Shaojun, vice chairman of the China Semiconductor Industry Association and professor at Tsinghua University, said at an industry event that AI accelerators consisting of 14nm logic chiplets and 18nm-based DRAMs developed in China could rival Nvidia's Blackwell processors that are made using a custom 4nm-class process technology at TSMC, reports DigiTimes.

Speaking at the ICC Global CEO Summit, Wei Shaojun indicated that the key to performance efficiency breakthrough would be advanced 3D stacking used to build Chinese accelerators.

Wei Shaojun — who previously said that goals set by China in the 'Made in China 2025' program were unachievable and who later called on the country to cease using foreign AI accelerators like Nvidia H20 and use domestic solutions instead — described a hypothetical 'fully controllable domestic solution' that would combine 14nm logic with 18nm DRAM using 3D hybrid bonding. There is no evidence that such a solution exists or could be built using technologies that are available in China, so the speech is strictly hypothetical.

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Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.

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