Written By Md Waquar Haider
Published By: Md Waquar Haider | Published: Feb 22, 2023, 11:07 AM (IST)
Samsung to manufacture fabless Ambarella's automotive chips (image: Pixabay)
Samsung on said Tuesday it will manufacture advanced automotive semiconductors for US chip design company Ambarella. Samsung will produce the Santa Clara-based chip company’s automotive AI central domain controller CV3-AD685, using its 5-nanometer (nm) process technology. Also Read: Google starts fixing Android Auto issues after users report connection problems
Ambarella’s CV3-AD685 System-on-Chip (SoC) is used for Advanced Driver Assistance Systems, which serve as the brain of an autonomous and self-driving vehicle, Samsung said. SoC is a single chip that includes main processor, graphics processor and memory, reports Yonhap news agency. Also Read: Samsung Galaxy A37 5G, Galaxy A57 5G launched in India: Price, specs, features
“This collaboration will help transform the next generation of autonomous driving vehicle safety systems by bringing new levels of AI processing performance, power and reliability,” Samsung said in a press release. The world’s largest memory chip maker said its 5nm process vastly enhanced Ambarella’s artificial intelligence capabilities. Also Read: Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra likely to keep S pen support with digitiser technology
Samsung said it will continue to boost the competitiveness of its foundry business using its advanced chipmaking technology, and try to secure new clients in the fast-growing automotive chip market.
Samsung has stepped up its efforts to enhance its foundry, or contract chip manufacturing, business.
For the fourth quarter, its foundry business posted record quarterly sales, and profit also increased year-on-year on the back of “advanced node capacity expansion, as well as customer base and application area diversification,” the company said. But it did not offer exact figures.
Samsung is a distant second in the foundry market with a 13 percent market share, falling far behind Taiwan’s TSMC with a 60 percent share in the fourth quarter, according to Counterpoint Research.