Applied Materials and Micron Technology announced a joint effort to develop next-generation memory technologies for artificial intelligence systems, combining research capabilities at Applied’s new EPIC Center in Silicon Valley and Micron’s innovation hub in Boise, Idaho. The collaboration will focus on advanced DRAM, high-bandwidth memory (HBM), and NAND technologies designed to deliver higher performance and improved energy efficiency for AI workloads.
The partnership brings together engineering teams from both companies to advance new materials, process technologies, and device architectures required for future memory nodes. The work will also include research on advanced packaging techniques that enable high-bandwidth, low-power memory integration with increasingly power-dense AI processors and accelerators.
Applied’s EPIC (Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization) Center represents a major U.S. investment in semiconductor equipment R&D, with capital spending expected to scale to approximately $5 billion as customer programs ramp. The facility aims to shorten the timeline between early-stage research and high-volume manufacturing by allowing chipmakers earlier access to equipment innovations and faster cycles of experimentation and learning.
• Applied Materials and Micron will collaborate on next-generation DRAM, HBM, and NAND technologies optimized for AI workloads
• Joint R&D activities will span Applied’s EPIC Center in Silicon Valley and Micron’s innovation center in Boise, Idaho
• The program focuses on new materials, semiconductor processes, and memory architectures
• The partnership also targets advanced packaging technologies for high-bandwidth, low-power memory systems
• Applied’s EPIC Center represents a planned $5 billion U.S. investment in semiconductor equipment research and commercialization
“Applied Materials and Micron have a long-standing partnership focused on driving higher performance and more energy-efficient advanced memory chips by pushing the boundaries of materials engineering and manufacturing innovation,” said Gary Dickerson, President and CEO of Applied Materials.
🌐 Analysis
AI systems increasingly rely on high-bandwidth memory and advanced DRAM to feed massive compute clusters, making memory innovation a central bottleneck in AI infrastructure. Collaborations between equipment suppliers and memory manufacturers—such as this effort between Applied Materials and Micron—aim to accelerate the transition from lab-scale materials research to production-ready technologies as demand for AI accelerators and memory capacity expands.






