Intel´s new 18A node has emerged as the frontrunner in the performance battle among two nm-class semiconductor manufacturing nodes, outpacing rivals TSMC N2 and Samsung SF2, according to data from TechInsights cited by Taiwanese media. The bespoke performance scale developed by TechInsights gives Intel 18A a leading score of 2.53, compared to TSMC N2´s 2.27 and Samsung SF2´s 2.19, underscoring Intel´s enhanced competitiveness in the high-end chip sector. This edge is credited in part to Intel´s adoption of a Backside Power Delivery Network (BSPDN), a pioneering move set to debut in Panther Lake CPUs in late 2025 for testing and in early 2026 for broader shipment. The BSPDN architecture elevates layout efficiency and component utilization by 5–10%, reduces interconnect resistance, and facilitates up to a 4% ISO power performance gain due to diminished intrinsic resistance compared to legacy power routing methods.
Intel´s 18A node also marks a substantial step forward in density and power efficiency. Compared to its predecessor, Intel 3, the 18A process achieves a 15% improvement in performance per watt and enables a 30% increase in transistor density within the same area. The technology features Intel´s RibbonFET transistor design and has officially entered risk production—a crucial prelude to full-scale manufacturing expected in the latter half of 2025. The final phase focuses on validating large-scale production capability, signaling Intel´s readiness to transition to volume output and cement its position in the advanced node foundry space.
Another notable stride is the significant improvement in SRAM scaling. High-performance SRAM cells contracted from 0.03 µm² on Intel 3 to 0.023 µm² on Intel 18A, while high-density cells now measure 0.021 µm². This resizing, with scaling factors of 0.77 and 0.88 respectively, refutes prior assumptions about stagnating SRAM miniaturization. Intel´s innovative ´around-the-array´ PowerVia approach reroutes power delivery pathways directly to I/O, control, and decoder circuits, eliminating the need for frontal bit-cell power supply and boosting macro bit density to 38.1 Mbit/mm²—on par with leading rivals. Collectively, these advances position Intel 18A as a formidable force in next-generation semiconductor innovation, paving the way for future computing, Artificial Intelligence, and data center applications.