• Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
Monday, June 8, 2026
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
No Result
View All Result

Home » PowerLattice Raises $25M for On-Package Power Delivery Chiplet

PowerLattice Raises $25M for On-Package Power Delivery Chiplet

November 17, 2025
in Semiconductors
A A

PowerLattice emerged from stealth with a $25 million Series A round to commercialize a power-delivery chiplet designed to cut compute power needs by more than 50% for next-generation AI accelerators. The startup says its on-package architecture shortens the power path and removes resistive losses that increasingly constrain GPUs now pushing beyond 2 kW per device. Playground Global and Celesta Capital co-led the round, with participation from additional investors.

The company’s design introduces miniaturized on-die magnetic inductors, vertical packaging, and a programmable control layer to deliver power directly inside the processor package. PowerLattice claims the approach reduces throttling, improves compute utilization, and enables more AI compute per rack. The chiplet integrates into existing SoC designs and is already sampling for 1 kW-class GPUs, CPUs, and accelerators.

Founded by Peng Zou, Gang Ren, and Sujith Dermal—veterans of Qualcomm, NUVIA, and Intel—the company is positioning its technology as a response to the data center “power wall,” with U.S. AI energy usage projected to triple by 2028. PowerLattice has raised $31 million to date and operates from Camas, Washington, with an additional office in Chandler, Arizona.

• Series A: $25M led by Playground Global and Celesta Capital

• Product: On-package power-delivery chiplet for AI accelerators

• Efficiency impact: Cuts compute power requirements by >50%

• System impact: Reduces power-related throttling and increases compute utilization

• Readiness: Silicon in hand; engineering samples underway for 1 kW+ GPUs and CPUs

• Team: Founders with experience in integrated magnetics, analog ICs, and power management

• Footprint: Headquartered in Camas, WA; office in Chandler, AZ

“Power is the defining challenge for AI’s future,” said Peng Zou, Co-Founder and CEO of PowerLattice.

🌐 Analysis: Power delivery has become a first-order limit for high-density AI clusters, with GPU power envelopes climbing from 700 W to well above 1.5 kW in less than three years. PowerLattice enters a competitive but rapidly expanding segment that includes on-package VRM strategies from hyperscalers, advanced PDN designs in next-gen NVIDIA and AMD platforms, and emerging chiplet ecosystems from Intel and TSMC. The success of PowerLattice’s chiplet will hinge on integration ease, thermal behavior, manufacturability, and gains validated in large-scale AI clusters.

ShareTweetShareSummarizeSummarize
Previous Post

Nokia Lands Major 5G Modernization Deal with Telecom Italia

Next Post

Avicena Pushes microLED Interconnects to 4Gbps at 80fJ/bit

Jim Carroll

Jim Carroll

Editor and Publisher, Converge! Network Digest, Optical Networks Daily - Covering the full stack of network convergence from Silicon Valley

Related Posts

AI Infrastructure

NVIDIA Expands Korea AI Push

June 7, 2026
Space

NTT Targets Space with Coherent Optical

June 7, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Singapore’s DayOne Accelerates Growth with US$4.5 Billion Raise 

June 7, 2026
Subsea

Padtec Acquires LEV Brazil to Re-Enter Subsea Market

June 5, 2026
Semiconductors

Marvell CEO: AI Scaling Has Become a Connectivity Challenge

June 5, 2026
Video

NTT Data: Enabling Physical AI

June 5, 2026
Next Post

Avicena Pushes microLED Interconnects to 4Gbps at 80fJ/bit

Categories

  • 5G / 6G / Wi-Fi
  • AI Infrastructure
  • All
  • Automotive Networking
  • Blueprints
  • Clouds and Carriers
  • Data Centers
  • Enterprise
  • Explainer
  • Feature
  • Financials
  • Last Mile / Middle Mile
  • Legal / Regulatory
  • Optical
  • Quantum
  • Research
  • Security
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Start-ups
  • Subsea
  • Sustainability
  • Video
  • Webinars

Archives

Tags

5G All AT&T Australia AWS Blueprint columns BroadbandWireless Broadcom China Ciena Cisco Data Centers Dell'Oro Ericsson FCC Financial Financials Huawei Infinera Intel Japan Juniper Last Mile Last Mille LTE Mergers and Acquisitions Mobile NFV Nokia Optical Packet Systems PacketVoice People Regulatory Satellite SDN Service Providers Silicon Silicon Valley StandardsWatch Storage TTP UK Verizon Wi-Fi
Converge Digest

A private dossier for networking and telecoms

Follow Us

  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version