Huawei Smartphone Uses Chinese Kirin 9030 Chip
By Reuters | 13 Dec, 2025
The chip fabricated by China's top foundry SMIC uses an improved 7-nanometer process which still lags the 5-nm nodes used by TSMC and Samsung.
The Kirin 9030, the chip that powers Huawei Technologies' latest flagship Mate 80 series handset, has been manufactured by China's top foundry SMIC with an improved version of 7 nanometres, which is still behind TSMC and Samsung, Canadian research firm TechInsights said.
The Kirin 9030 is manufactured using SMIC's N+3 process, a "scaled extension" of its previous 7 nanometer (N+2) node, TechInsights said in a report published on December 8.
"However, in absolute terms, N+3 remains substantially less scaled than industry 5 (nanometer) processes from TSMC and Samsung," it said.
Huawei and SMIC did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular business hours.
In October, China added TechInsights, which has been publishing regularly reports on Huawei and SMIC’s chip progress, to its unreliable entity list.
(Reporting by Che Pan, Brenda Goh and Gursimran Kaur; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
Recent Articles
- Success of SpaceX IPO Mint's World's First Trillionaire
- Ariana Grande to White House: Don't Use My Music for 'Heinous Nonsense'
- Iran Says No Final Decision Made on Deal That Trump Hopes Could Be Signed Soon
- AI Injects Weakness into SpaceX's Ambitious IPO Plans
- Few Americans Love Trump's White House Cage Match Plan
- Google in Talks with Samsung to Make Part of Next-Gen Chip
- Nike's World Cup Play: Take on Adidas and Revitalize the Brand
- India Demands End to US Attacks on Ships After Three Sailors Killed
- SpaceX IPO Draws More Than $70 Billion in Retail Orders
- Ukraine's Drone Commander Aims to Cut Crimea off from Russia
