The wireless charging landscape is shifting. Qi2 has officially become the IEC 63563-1 international standard, with 114 smartphones already Qi2-certified as of May 2026. For any device using Qi 1.3 or higher, identity authentication is now a mandatory safety feature. It’s no longer just an option; it’s a hardware-level gatekeeper that ensures chargers are safe, high-powered, and ready for global markets.
In the consumer market, Chinese silicon is leading the charge. Fudan Micro’s FM1210 is already powering Samsung devices, while Tsinghua Unic’s T91 series has surpassed 10 million shipments with its top-tier CC EAL6+ security. For space-constrained gadgets like smartwatches, Hongsi Electronics has launched the HSC32C1, which sips power at less than 100uA in sleep mode while keeping the BOM cost incredibly low.
The car cabin is the ultimate test of durability. Automotive-grade chips like the HED CIU98_B and Fudan Micro FM1230 are built to survive a decade on the road, meeting the rigorous AEC-Q100 standards. Pushing the envelope further, C-Sky Microsystems is utilizing a RISC-V security core in the CCM3310S-LP to offer a fully domestic, end-to-end security solution for car manufacturers.
As Qi2.2 certification rolls out (starting June 2025), speed to market is everything. Chips like the ConvenientPower CPS1010 and HED CIU98_D are already being designed into next-gen Qi2.2 hardware, such as the latest integrated screen displays. By covering every base from low-power wearables to high-stakes automotive systems, these chipmakers are securing the future of the wireless charging ecosystem.
All Comments (0)