Huawei Could Start Producing 1.4nm-Equivalent Chips by 2031

Main Image
  • Like
  • Comment
  • Share
TL; DR
  • Huawei has introduced a new semiconductor framework called the Tau (τ) Scaling Law alongside a new LogicFolding chip architecture that it says could achieve 1.4nm-equivalent transistor density by 2031.
  • Instead of relying purely on smaller manufacturing nodes and EUV lithography, Huawei says it is focusing on architecture-level optimizations, signal delays, and system efficiency to bypass current hardware restrictions.
  • The first commercial Kirin smartphone chips using LogicFolding are expected later in 2026.

Huawei has officially unveiled a new semiconductor roadmap that could become one of the company’s biggest long-term technology bets yet. During the IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS 2026) in Shanghai, Huawei semiconductor chief He Tingbo introduced what the company calls the “Tau (τ) Scaling Law,” along with a new chip architecture named LogicFolding.

According to Huawei, this new approach could eventually allow the company to achieve transistor density levels equivalent to 1.4nm-class chips by 2031, despite ongoing US sanctions limiting access to advanced EUV lithography systems. For reference, TSMC currently plans to begin mass production of actual 1.4nm chips around 2028.

What Is the Tau Scaling Law?

For decades, semiconductor progress has mostly followed Moore’s Law, where chipmakers improve performance by physically shrinking transistor sizes generation after generation. 

Huawei says the Tau Scaling Law takes a different path. Instead of focusing entirely on shrinking transistors geometrically, the company wants to optimize overall chip efficiency through signal delay reductions, architectural redesigns, and system-level performance improvements over time.

Alongside this, Huawei introduced LogicFolding, a proprietary chip design architecture that reportedly improves transistor density by around 55% compared to more traditional layouts while also improving efficiency.

Simply put, Huawei is trying to squeeze significantly more performance and density from existing manufacturing capabilities rather than depending entirely on next-generation fabrication equipment.

Designed Around Current Sanctions

One of the biggest reasons behind this strategy is the continued US restriction on advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment. Since 2019, Huawei has faced heavy limitations around accessing cutting-edge EUV lithography systems used for modern 3nm, 2nm, and future manufacturing nodes.

Right now, China’s most advanced large-scale commercial manufacturing capability through SMIC is generally believed to sit around the 7nm level.

Huawei says Tau Scaling and LogicFolding allow it to reduce reliance on pure node shrinking while still pushing toward higher-density, higher-performance chips over the next several years.

The company described the approach as both “feasible and affordable,” though it has not yet shared independent third-party benchmarks or validation data.

First Kirin Chips Arrive Later This Year

Huawei says it has already designed and mass-produced 381 chips over the last six years using parts of this new design philosophy. The first fully LogicFolding-based commercial chips are expected to arrive later in 2026 inside upcoming Kirin smartphone processors, likely debuting with the Huawei Mate 90 series.

After that, Huawei plans to scale the architecture further into its Ascend AI processors and large-scale AI data-center hardware by 2030.

Right now, these are still long-term claims rather than proven commercial results. Real-world performance, thermals, efficiency, manufacturing scalability, and software optimization will ultimately decide whether Huawei’s approach works at scale.

Still, the announcement highlights how aggressively Huawei continues pushing toward semiconductor self-reliance despite ongoing sanctions around advanced chip manufacturing equipment.

You can follow Smartprix on TwitterFacebookInstagram, and Google News. Visit smartprix.com for the latest tech and auto newsreviews, and guides.

Mehtab AnsariMehtab Ansari
Mehtab Ansari is the Assistant Editor – Features & Reviews at Smartprix, where he writes about smartphones, laptops, audio gear, and everything in between. A computer science student by degree but a tech nerd by heart, he’s been into consumer tech for years and started reviewing products professionally in February 2024. He’s especially into photography and audio, often spending more time testing a smartphone’s camera than he probably should. For him, tech isn’t just work, it’s what he’s always thinking about.

Expertise 

Smartphones, laptops, tablets, monitors, smartwatches, photography, and audio gear. I’ve reviewed over 60 products across these categories on Smartprix in the past year and a half.

Education - Bachelor of Computer Applications – Nizam College, Hyderabad (2022–2025) | Joined Smartprix -February 2024 | Published Reviews & Stories - 723

Related Articles

ImageNissan’s Compact SUV Tekton Launched In India From ₹10.49 Lakhs, Takes On Creta With 5-Star BNCAP Rating

Nissan has launched the Tekton in India at its global premiere in Mumbai on July 9, 2026. The launch marks the brand’s most significant push into the mainstream SUV segment in over a decade. Built on the same platform as the Renault Duster and available in 12 variants with two engine options, it comes ready …

ImageApple Could Skip M6 Pro and Max Chips, Save Major MacBook Pro Redesign for 2027

Apple could be making a major change to its Mac chip strategy. According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple now plans to introduce only a standard M6 chip later this year, while reserving bigger upgrades for the next-generation M7 lineup expected in 2027. Base M6 MacBook Pro reportedly arriving later this year Gurman reports that Apple …

ImageHuawei and SMIC breakthrough chip uses tech from US companies

Remember just how popular the Huawei Mate 60 Series became in China with its 7nm Kirin chipset? Well, it could be because Huawei Technologies and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC) used American-made technology to produce these chips last year prompting the US authorities to be more strict this time around. Huawei Mate 60 Pro’s 7nm …

ImageAlleged Huawei Kirin 1020 Chip Will Be Twice As Powerful As Kirin 970

Huawei’s widely uses in-house produced Kirin branded chips on its phones. Almost all flagship phones from the brand in the last year are powered by Kirin 970, the first chip with a dedicated Neural engine. If the latest developments are to be believed, the OEM is working on a new chipset that could be twice …

ImageiQOO Z11 Spotted on Geekbench as Official Teasers Hint at an Imminent Launch

iQOO appears to be preparing to launch a new Z-series smartphone in India. An upcoming device carrying the model number I2514 has now surfaced on Geekbench, while the company has also started teasing the number ‘11’ on social media. Together, the two developments strongly suggest that the iQOO Z11 could be the brand’s next launch. …

Discuss

Be the first to leave a comment.