Intel® Core™ Ultra 200S, Intel® Core™ Ultra 200S Plus ,Intel® Core™ Ultra 200HX and 200HX Plus Series Processors

Datasheet, Volume 1 of 2

ID Date Version Classification
832586 03/17/2026 Public
Document Table of Contents
LAM

Assured Power (cTDP) Modes

Note:Assured Power (cTDP) availability may vary between the different SKUs.

With cTDP, the processor is now capable of altering the maximum sustained power with an alternate processor IA core base frequency. Assured Power (cTDP) allows operation in situations where extra cooling is available or situations where a cooler and quieter mode of operation is desired.

cTDP consists of three modes as shown in the following table.

Assured Power (cTDP)

Processor Power Characteristic​ Description​ of Characteristic Processor Design Considerations​
Maximum Turbo Power The maximum sustained (>1s) power dissipation of the processor as limited by current and/or temperature controls.  Instantaneous power may exceed Maximum Turbo Power for short durations (<=10ms). Maximum Turbo Power is  configurable by system vendor and can be system specific​. Intel performance advocacy for power delivery and transient thermal solution design (PL2)​
Base Power The time-averaged power dissipation that the processor is validated to not exceed during manufacturing while executing an Intel-specified high complexity workload at Base Frequency and at the operating temperature as specified in the  Datasheet for the SKU segment and configuration.​ Intel reference performance advocacy for sustained thermal solution design (PL1)​
Minimum Assured Power  Min Assured Power is a performance advocacy determined by running a complex scenario  defined by Intel. Every product SKU stack has guidance on Min Assured Power for thermal chassis design. Represents Intel specified min PL1 that needs to be taken for thermal design to get the advocated performance experience. Min Assured Power is the performance vs power cross-over point across the product SKU stack. Intel minimum performance advocacy for sustained thermal solution design (PL1)
High Concurrency Power  High Concurrency Power is a functional characteristic determined by running a complex scenario defined by Intel. Every processor consumes a minimum power during a maximum connected case.  This is a functional characteristic, not intended to indicate performance floor. Scenario takes into consideration IO ports, compute IPs concurrency (CPU, GPU, IPU) along with memory BW. Temperature assumption of spec limit. Manufacturing screening is done to exclude parts that don't meet the target power for the high concurrency scenario. The processor may not honor PL1 values set lower than high concurrency power during the high concurrency scenario. Thermal solution capability required to support the high concurrency scenario as described

In each mode, the Intel® Turbo Boost Technology 2.0 power limits are reprogrammed along with a new OS controlled frequency range. The Intel® Dynamic Tuning driver assists in Processor Base Power operation by adjusting processor PL1 dynamically. The cTDP mode does not change the maximum per-processor IA core turbo frequency.