OpenAI plans to build its own AI chips on TSMC's forthcoming 1.6 nm A16 process node

TSMC 3nm
(Image credit: TSMC)

ChatGPT developer OpenAI has been musing over building its own AI chips for some time now but it looks like the project is definitely going ahead, as United Daily News reports the company is paying TSMC to make the new chips. But rather than using its current N4 or N3 process nodes, OpenAI has booked production slots for the 1.6 nm, so-called A16, process node.

The report from UDN (via Wccftech) doesn't provide any concrete evidence for this claim but the Taiwanese news agency is usually pretty accurate when it comes to tech forecasts like this. At the moment, OpenAI spends vast amounts of money to run ChatGPT, in part due to the very high cost of Nvidia's AI servers.

Nvidia's hardware dominates the industry, with Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Tesla spending hundreds of millions of dollars on its Hopper H100 and Blackwell superchips. While the cost of designing and developing a competitive AI chip is just as expensive, once you have a working product, the ongoing costs are much lower.

UDN suggests that OpenAI had originally planned to use TSMC's relatively low-cost N5 process node to manufacture its AI chip but that's apparently been dropped in favour of a system that's still in development—A16 will be the successor to N2, which itself isn't being used to mass produce chips yet.

TSMC states that A16 is a 1.6 nm node but the number itself is fairly meaningless now. It will use the same gate-all-around (GAAFET) nanosheet transistors as N2 but will be the first TSMC node to employ backside power delivery, called Super Power Rail.

But why would OpenAI want to use something that's still a few years away from being ready for bulk orders? UDN's report suggests that OpenAI has approached Broadcom and Marvell to handle the development of the AI chips but neither company has much experience with TSMC's cutting-edge nodes, as far as I know.

One possibility is that the whole project is being done in collaboration with Apple, which uses ChatGPT in its own AI system. That's currently powered via Google's AI servers but given how much Apply prefers using its own technology these days, I wouldn't be surprised if it was also looking to develop new AI chips.

With mounting losses and an AI market packed with competitors, OpenAI's future looks somewhat uncertain, though rumours of investment from Apple and Nvidia may help turn things around. The regular influx of millions of dollars of funding is certainly helping it maintain stock value, for example.

Your next machine

Gaming PC group shot

(Image credit: Future)

Best gaming PC: The top pre-built machines.
Best gaming laptop: Great devices for mobile gaming.

But if OpenAI is ultimately bought by Microsoft, Meta, or even Nvidia (or perhaps part-owned by all three), then it's unlikely that the OpenAI chip project would ever be finished, as Nvidia certainly wouldn't want to lose any valuable sales.

Even if it does come to fruition, don't expect it to make any performance headlines outside of handling GPT, simply because that's the nature of all ASICs (application specification integrated circuits)—they're designed to do one job very well but that's it. OpenAI's chip might be great for OpenAI but few other companies would be interested.

Nick Evanson
Hardware Writer

Nick, gaming, and computers all first met in 1981, with the love affair starting on a Sinclair ZX81 in kit form and a book on ZX Basic. He ended up becoming a physics and IT teacher, but by the late 1990s decided it was time to cut his teeth writing for a long defunct UK tech site. He went on to do the same at Madonion, helping to write the help files for 3DMark and PCMark. After a short stint working at Beyond3D.com, Nick joined Futuremark (MadOnion rebranded) full-time, as editor-in-chief for its gaming and hardware section, YouGamers. After the site shutdown, he became an engineering and computing lecturer for many years, but missed the writing bug. Cue four years at TechSpot.com and over 100 long articles on anything and everything. He freely admits to being far too obsessed with GPUs and open world grindy RPGs, but who isn't these days? 

Read more
SUQIAN, CHINA - JANUARY 27, 2025 - An illustration photo shows the logo of DeepSeek and ChatGPT in Suqian, Jiangsu province, China, January 27, 2025. (Photo credit should read CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
China's DeepSeek chatbot reportedly gets much more done with fewer GPUs but Nvidia still thinks it's 'excellent' news
TAIPEI, TAIWAN - 2023/06/01: Jensen Huang, President of NVIDIA holding the Grace hopper superchip CPU used for generative AI at supermicro keynote presentation during the COMPUTEX 2023. The COMPUTEX 2023 runs from 30 May to 02 June 2023 and gathers over 1,000 exhibitors from 26 different countries with 3000 booths to display their latest products and to sign orders with foreign buyers.
Microsoft is Nvidia's biggest AI chip buyer of the year, and it's not even close. With ByteDance and Tencent coming out ahead of Zuck, Bezos, and Musk's outfits, too
A close-up stylized photo of a silicon wafer, showing many small processor dies
Broadcom and Nvidia are claimed to be testing manufacturing on Intel's 18A process node, and even AMD is reportedly interested
Alibaba
Forget DeepSeek R1, apparently it's now Alibaba that has the most powerful, the cheapest, the most everything-est chatbot
Images of Nvidia's Blackwell GPU from GTC.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says his company is 'out of GPUs' to which I reply 'welcome to the party, pal'
ARM logo exhibited at ARM stand during the Mobile World Congress (MWC).
Arm reportedly plans to make its own CPUs from this summer with future chips said to be powering a revolutionary Jony Ive-designed AI device
Latest in AI
Closeup of the new Copilot key coming to Windows 11 PC keyboards
Microsoft co-authored paper suggests the regular use of gen-AI can leave users with a 'diminished skill for independent problem-solving' and at least one AI model seems to agree
Still image of Bastion holding a bird, taken from Microsoft's Copilot for Gaming reveal trailer
Microsoft unveils Copilot for Gaming, an AI-powered 'ultimate gaming sidekick' that will let you talk to your console so you don't have to talk to your friends
BURBANK, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 15: Protestors attend the SAG-AFTRA Video Game Strike Picket on August 15, 2024 in Burbank, California. (Photo by Lila Seeley/Getty Images)
8 months into their strike, videogame voice actors say the industry's latest proposal is 'filled with alarming loopholes that will leave our members vulnerable to AI abuse'
live action Jimbo the Jester from Balatro holding a playing card and addressing the camera
LocalThunk forbids AI-generated art on the Balatro subreddit: 'I think it does real harm to artists of all kinds'
Aloy
'Creepy,' 'ghastly,' 'rancid': Viewers react to leaked video of Sony's AI-powered Aloy
Seattle, USA - Jul 24, 2022: The South Lake Union Google Headquarter entrance at sunset.
Google is rolling out an even more AI-heavy search engine mode because 'power users want AI responses for even more of their searches'
Latest in News
Storm trooper hero
Another live service shooter is getting shut down, this time before it even launched on Steam
Possibility Space concept art.
Possibility Space owners sue NetEase for $900 million over allegations it spread 'false and defamatory rumors' of fraud at the studio that ultimately forced it to close
Valve soldier man on a pc.
2024 was Steam's 'best year ever' of users buying newly released games—but I wouldn't celebrate the end of the forever game era just yet
Money money money.
Valve tracked 1.7 million Steam users who joined in 2023 to see if they stuck around—they did, and they spent $93 million
Closeup of the new Copilot key coming to Windows 11 PC keyboards
Microsoft co-authored paper suggests the regular use of gen-AI can leave users with a 'diminished skill for independent problem-solving' and at least one AI model seems to agree
A lolporrit squeals in excitement while being driven in a moon buggie in Final Fantasy 14: Dawntrail, patch 7.2.
Final Fantasy 14 patch 7.2's trailer has me finally hyped to get stuck back in—and to go to the moon and pilot some mechs, because why not