The i5-14501E uses the LGA 1700 socket and is built on a 10 nm semiconductor process, with a maximum operating temperature of 100 °C and a TDP of 65W. It includes integrated graphics and fully supports 64-bit operation. PCIe 5 connectivity is also supported, placing it on a current-generation platform interface for expansion and storage devices.
The processor runs six cores at a base clock of 3.3 GHz with a clock multiplier of 33, supporting 12 threads in total through multithreading. It can reach a turbo clock of 5.2 GHz via Turbo Boost version 2, though the multiplier is locked, so manual overclocking is not possible. The chip does not use big.LITTLE heterogeneous core architecture, meaning all cores operate under a uniform design. Cache is structured as 480 KB of L1, 12 MB of L2 at 2 MB per core, and 24 MB of L3 at 4 MB per core, providing a reasonable buffer for data-intensive workloads.
The integrated UHD Graphics 770 runs at a base clock of 300 MHz and can boost up to 1550 MHz, with 32 execution units backed by 256 shading units, 16 texture mapping units, and 8 render output units. It supports up to four displays simultaneously and is compatible with DirectX 12, OpenGL 4.5, and OpenCL 3, covering a solid range of graphics APIs for general desktop and light compute workloads.
The i5-14501E supports DDR5 memory at up to 4800 MHz across two channels, delivering a maximum memory bandwidth of 76.8 GB/s. It can address up to 192 GB of RAM in total, and ECC memory is supported, making it a practical fit for systems where data integrity is a priority.
The processor supports multithreading and includes the NX bit for hardware-level memory protection. Its instruction set support spans MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, covering a broad range of workloads from vectorized math and media processing to hardware-accelerated encryption. The inclusion of AES and NX bit support adds a layer of security-oriented capability at the hardware level.