Samsung-Nvidia AI Megafactory: How 50,000 GPUs Will Revolutionize Chip Making

Samsung and Nvidia are joining forces to build a groundbreaking AI megafactory that will transform chip manufacturing. This facility will integrate artificial intelligence across every phase of semiconductor production using over 50,000 Nvidia GPUs. The partners are leveraging their 25-year relationship to create digital twins of entire chip fabs for advanced simulation. This initiative represents a major step toward AI-driven manufacturing that could revolutionize the global semiconductor industry.

Key Points: Samsung Nvidia Build AI Megafactory for Chip Production

  • Integrates AI across entire semiconductor manufacturing flow from design to quality control
  • Runs on more than 50,000 Nvidia GPUs for massive computational power
  • Uses digital twins of chip fabs for simulation and predictive maintenance
  • Leverages 25-year partnership history between Samsung and Nvidia
3 min read

Samsung, Nvidia partner to build next-gen AI megafactory for chip production

Samsung and Nvidia partner to create AI-powered megafactory using 50,000 GPUs, revolutionizing semiconductor manufacturing with real-time optimization and digital twins.

"The Samsung AI Factory goes beyond traditional automation - Samsung Electronics Official"

Taipei, November 1

Samsung Electronics said Friday that it will create a next-generation artificial intelligence megafactory in partnership with US chip giant Nvidia, aiming to embed AI across its entire global semiconductor production line, according to Focus Taiwan.

The new platform will integrate AI into every phase of the manufacturing flow, from semiconductor design and processing to equipment control and quality assurance, and will run on more than 50,000 Nvidia GPUs.

"The Samsung AI Factory goes beyond traditional automation," a Samsung Electronics official said. "It connects and interprets immense data generated across chip design, production and equipment operations."

Described by the company as an "intelligent manufacturing platform," the factory will use AI to analyse, predict and optimise manufacturing conditions in real time.

The initiative builds on a partnership between Samsung and Nvidia that spans over 25 years. The two companies first collaborated when Samsung supplied DRAM for Nvidia's early graphics cards, and the relationship has since expanded to include foundry and memory technologies.

The latest joint efforts are focused on HBM4, a high-bandwidth memory solution built using Samsung's sixth-generation 10nm-class DRAM and 4nm logic base die.

"Samsung will continue to deliver next-generation memory solutions, including HBM, GDDR and SOCAMM, as well as foundry services, driving innovation and scalability across the global AI value chain," the official said.

The megafactory will utilise Nvidia's Omniverse and Cuda-X platforms to construct "digital twins" of entire chip fabs -- virtual models that allow engineers to simulate equipment operations and potential upgrades before they are applied to physical systems. These simulations can help with predictive maintenance and process optimisation.

On the production floor, Samsung is also leveraging Nvidia's cuLitho software to achieve up to 20 times faster performance in computational lithography. This boosts processes like optical proximity correction, which enables AI to more precisely predict and fix circuit pattern variations, improving development speed and chip yield.

In the design stage, Samsung is working with electronic design automation partners to develop GPU-accelerated tools to push the boundaries of semiconductor design capabilities.

In robotics and factory automation, Samsung is deploying Nvidia's RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Server Edition to enhance the performance of humanoid robots and is using Jetson Thor for real-time AI reasoning and task execution in smart robots.

The partnership also extends to next-generation mobile networks. Through joint AI-RAN development, the two companies are building a system that allows edge devices -- like drones and industrial robots -- to carry out real-time AI inference and decision-making using Nvidia's GPU compute power combined with Samsung's software-based mobile network infrastructure.

"This AI-powered mobile network will play a crucial role as a neural network essential in the widespread adoption of physical AI," the official said.

Samsung said it plans to apply the AI factory infrastructure across its global sites, including the new chip fab under construction in Taylor, Texas. The move reinforces the company's ambitions to lead in every major semiconductor area: memory, logic, foundry and advanced packaging.

Samsung's AI models are already running in over 400 million consumer devices. Now, the company aims to embed these capabilities into its own factories through the Megatron framework, supporting multilingual interactions, intelligent summarisation and advanced reasoning.

"This is a critical milestone in our journey to lead the global shift toward AI-driven manufacturing," the official said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Amazing partnership! The digital twins concept is revolutionary for manufacturing. Hope this leads to more affordable AI chips for consumers in India. Our startups could benefit from better hardware access. 🤖
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Aditya G
While this is impressive, I'm concerned about the environmental impact of such massive AI factories. The energy consumption of 50,000 GPUs must be enormous. Hope they're using renewable energy sources. 🌱
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Sarah B
The 25-year partnership history is remarkable! Shows how strategic collaborations pay off long-term. Indian companies should learn from this - we need more such enduring tech partnerships in our ecosystem.
K
Karthik V
The HBM4 development is crucial for next-gen AI applications. As someone working in Bangalore's tech sector, I can see how this will accelerate AI adoption across industries. Exciting times ahead! 💡
M
Michael C
The real-time AI reasoning for industrial robots is game-changing. This could transform manufacturing efficiency globally. Hope Indian manufacturing units can adopt similar technologies soon.

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