PowerLattice makes a small chip component called a power delivery chiplet that sits inside a processor's package and delivers electricity right next to where the computing happens. By moving power regulation closer to the chip, they cut energy waste by more than half — a big deal when AI chips are consuming record amounts of electricity. While competitors deliver power from the motherboard inches away from the chip, PowerLattice places voltage regulation just hundreds of micrometers from the processor die, cutting compute power needs by more than 50%. Their chiplet-based approach is inherently scalable and can be deployed in parallel, adapting to any SoC power topology.
AI accelerators are straining data center power and cooling infrastructure, making PowerLattice's 50%+ power reduction directly critical to sustaining AI compute scaling.
PowerLattice emerged from stealth in November 2025 with a $25M Series A led by Playground Global and Celesta Capital (with former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger as a board member).