Advanced Packaging Key to AI Chip Performance as Moore’s Law Slows, Analyst Says
December 15, 2025 | PRNewswireEstimated reading time: 3 minutes
As Moore's Law slows, advanced packaging has become the critical lever driving breakthroughs in AI chip performance, according to DIGITIMES chief semiconductor analyst Tony Huang. Speaking with DIGITIMES Asia, Huang emphasized that heterogeneous integration is now as pivotal to system performance as transistor scaling once was.
Without advanced packaging, moving from 28nm to A16 would deliver roughly an 80-fold increase in compute density per reticle area, Huang said. With it, the gain rises to around 320 times.
Bottlenecks driving innovation
He explained that AI workloads have exposed multiple technical bottlenecks—what he calls the new "walls": the memory wall, addressed through high-bandwidth memory (HBM); the I/O and communication walls, tackled by reducing latency through chiplet and interposer technologies; the power and thermal walls, mitigated through power efficiency and thermal management; and the yield and fabrication walls, eased by smaller chiplets with higher yields.
Technologies such as 3D SoC stacking, hybrid bonding, and co-packaged optics (CPO) are now key enablers, he added.
Market growth outpacing the semiconductor industry
Huang forecasts that advanced packaging for AI data center chips will grow at a compound annual rate of 45.5% from 2024 to 2030, far outpacing the overall semiconductor industry's 8.7% and the broader packaging and testing sector's 9.5%.
"2.5D CoWoS-type solutions still dominate and will account for more than half of the total market," he said. "Their share will gradually decline from 69% to 58% as 3D and hybrid approaches mature."
He noted that the industry is transitioning from 2.5D to 3.5D packaging, citing AMD's MI300X AI accelerator, which combines 3D SoIC and 2.5D CoWoS and is manufactured by TSMC. Broadcom is also developing a 3.5D accelerator using a face-to-face structure, he said.
Taiwan's dominant position
"Taiwanese companies accounted for about 77% of the global data center AI packaging market in 2024," Huang said. "Even with intensifying competition from Intel, Samsung, and new US and Chinese ecosystems, Taiwan's share is expected to stay near 70% by 2030."
If HBM assembly—still primarily done in South Korea—is excluded, Taiwan's market share reached 90% in 2024, he added.
Defining the landscape
Huang noted that DIGITIMES defines data center AI chips in three categories: AI server CPUs; AI accelerators, including GPUs from NVIDIA and AMD, and custom AI chips like Google's TPU and AWS Trainium; and AI networking chips such as switch ICs from Broadcom and DPUs from NVIDIA.
CPO, or co-packaged optics, falls within the AI networking segment and is also considered advanced packaging.
"TSMC's hybrid bonding approach integrates electrical ICs and photonic ICs into a single optical-electronic module," Huang explained.
China's self-sufficiency push
China, meanwhile, is pushing for over 70% self-sufficiency in data center AI chips. Key domestic players include SMIC (foundry), CXMT (HBM2E memory), and SJ SEMI (2.5D CoWoS-type packaging).
By 2030, Huang estimates that Chinese AI chips could represent more than 15% of global shipments, though their revenue share may reach only 10–12% due to lagging technology.
"To close the gap, Chinese vendors are adopting large-scale clustering and optical interconnect approaches," he said.
"For example, Huawei's next-generation AI chips—expected around 2028—will roughly match the performance of Nvidia's H200 from 2023, but China compensates with scale and software optimization."
The new axis of progress
Advanced packaging, with its projected 45.5% compound annual growth rate, represents more than an engineering trend—it's the new axis of progress for the AI era.
"If transistor scaling was the vertical climb of Moore's Law, advanced packaging is the horizontal expansion," Huang concluded. "It's what allows AI chips to break physical limits and deliver the performance needed for the data-driven world ahead."
Subscribe
Stay ahead of the technologies shaping the future of electronics with our latest newsletter, Advanced Electronics Packaging Digest. Get expert insights on advanced packaging, materials, and system-level innovation, delivered straight to your inbox.Subscribe now to stay informed, competitive, and connected.
Suggested Items
SCHMID Launches 'Any Layer ET' for Panel-Level Advances Packaging, to Present at ECTC 2026
04/30/2026 | SCHMID GroupSCHMID Group, a global leader in advanced manufacturing solutions for the electronics and semiconductor industries, is advancing next-generation substrate manufacturing with its proprietary Any Layer ET (Embedded Trace) Process for full panel-level Advanced Packaging.
AI Competition Turns into a Supply Chain Arms Race, Tightening Advanced Packaging and 3nm Capacity
04/30/2026 | TrendForceTrendForce’s latest foundry industry findings point out that AI demand has surged rapidly since 2023, leading to capacity bottlenecks in 3 nm–2 nm wafers and 2.5D/3D advanced packaging.
Amcor Opens Advanced Healthcare Packaging Coating Facility in Malaysia
04/27/2026 | PRNewswireAmcor, a global leader in developing and producing responsible packaging solutions, opened an advanced healthcare packaging coating facility in Subang Jaya, Selangor, marking a significant expansion of its manufacturing footprint in Malaysia and Southeast Asia.
ASML Reports €8.8B Net Sales and €2.8B Net Income in Q1 2026
04/22/2026 | ASMLASML expects Q2 2026 total net sales between €8.4 billion and €9.0 billion, and a gross margin between 51% and 52%
Silicon Box Joins imec Automotive Chiplet Program to Strengthen Next-Gen Vehicle Supply Chains
04/22/2026 | PRNewswireSilicon Box, an industry leader in advanced semiconductor packaging solutions, announced that it has formally joined imec's Automotive Chiplet Program (ACP), a collaborative research initiative aimed at accelerating chiplet technology adoption required to drive the development of next-generation vehicles.