Microbt's M56S at 212 TH/s for $9.40 per day, slightly higher than Canaan's Avalon A15-194T, 194 TH/s for $9.29 per day. Bitmain's T21 generates 190 TH/s for $9.08 per day, Microbt's M60S at 186 TH/s for $8.93 per day. Canaan's Avalon A1566 adds 185 TH/s for $8.88 per day, while the top 50 include Bitmain's S19 Pro+ Hyd, providing 198 TH/s for $8.65 per day.
III. Technical Roadmap: Liquid Cooling Dominance and Chip Revolution
Among the top 50 profitable mining machines, liquid cooling equipment occupies 17 out of the top 20, with Bitmain exclusively holding 9 models through its S21 Hydro series. This dominance stems from three major innovations:
- Heat Conduction Efficiency: Liquid cooling solutions lower chip operating temperature by 42°C, improving computing power stability to 99.3%;
- Energy Reuse: Mining farm waste heat heating systems increase overall energy efficiency to 85%, offsetting 15% of electricity costs;
- Chip Density: Bitmain's BM1387 (6nm) and Canaan's Avalon A1566 (5nm) chips increase transistor count by 28% per wafer, reducing silicon cost per TH by $0.17.
Meanwhile, semiconductor processes approach physical limits: TSMC's 3nm process Antminer S21+ has compressed energy efficiency to 16.5 J/TH, with 2nm experimental line samples showing potential to break 12 J/TH. This means the mining machine iteration cycle will shorten from 12 months to 8 months in the next two years, accelerating the elimination of outdated generation equipment by 40%.
IV. Market Landscape: Positioning of Leading Manufacturers
- Bitmain: Monopolizing 46% of the profitability list with 23 models, S21 series liquid cooling miners become the first choice for supercomputing centers;
- MicroBT: 15 devices listed, M60/M60S series capturing the North American market through immersion solutions;
- Canaan Technology: 6 Avalon models focusing on energy efficiency balance, self-operated mining farm computing power growing 17% month-on-month;
- Bit Deer and Auradine: Entering the high-end market with 4 and 2 devices respectively, Teraflux series becoming a dark horse in liquid cooling.
Geographic distribution further confirms energy arbitrage logic: North American mining farm hosting prices at $0.04–0.06 per kilowatt-hour, while Ethiopian and Middle Eastern projects as low as $0.03, driving companies like Canaan to deploy 75% of new computing power here.
Conclusion: Survival Rules in the Era of Efficiency Redundancy
As the BTC network computing power breaks 921 EH/s peak, daily revenue per terahash (Hash Price) has dropped from $0.12 in 2024 to $0.049. In this brutal reality, miners must build a triple defense:
- Energy Anchor: Lock in electricity prices below $0.03 for ten years through nuclear power agreements and hydroelectric futures;
- Hardware Redundancy: Adopt modular mining machines, replacing computing power boards according to difficulty growth gradient;
- Revenue Hedging: Convert 20%–30% of daily output to BTC reserves, using option tools to lock in profits.
As the 2022 lesson of mining machine "selling by weight" showed—only by compressing computing power costs to the lowest 10% of the entire network can one traverse bull and bear cycles. Today's top 50 profitable miners are not just the crystallization of technological revolution, but also coordinates on the global energy arbitrage map. As liquid cooling and immersion solutions gradually replace air cooling, and 2nm chips begin to deliver 200 megahashes per watt, Bitcoin mining is transforming from extensive energy consumption to a precisely operated computing power thermodynamic engineering.




