Applied Materials introduced a new portfolio of semiconductor manufacturing systems aimed at accelerating production of advanced DRAM and 3D chip packaging technologies that underpin AI processors. The new equipment spans epitaxy, chemical mechanical planarization (CMP), electrochemical deposition (ECD), plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), and electron-beam metrology, addressing critical manufacturing challenges associated with high bandwidth memory (HBM), advanced packaging, and increasingly complex three-dimensional chip architectures.
At the wafer fabrication level, Applied Materials unveiled an enhanced Centura Prime Epi system that brings logic-class epitaxy techniques into next-generation DRAM manufacturing. The system selectively grows doped silicon germanium and silicon phosphorus within DRAM peripheral transistors, combining strain engineering with precision doping to improve transistor drive current and energy efficiency. Applied said the new platform occupies 20% less fab floor space than previous generations, allowing customers to increase production capacity while supporting the higher bandwidth and lower power requirements of future HBM and DDR memory devices.
Applied also introduced three systems targeting the most demanding advanced packaging processes required for AI accelerators. The Opta Quad CMP platform dynamically adjusts polishing conditions in real time to improve surface planarity for hybrid bonding. The Nokota VMax 2 ECD system introduces Adaptive Pattern Tuning technology to improve copper plating uniformity for through-silicon vias (TSVs) and microbumps. Meanwhile, the Producer Avila 2 PECVD platform deposits stress-balanced dielectric films that improve the mechanical stability of ultra-thin DRAM dies used in 12-layer, 16-layer and future higher-stack HBM devices.
Applied further expanded its process control portfolio with two new electron-beam inspection systems optimized for advanced packaging. The VeritySEM 7AP critical dimension metrology platform measures highly warped, heterogeneous substrates with sub-10 nm sensitivity, while the SEMVision G7AP defect analysis system automates high-resolution inspection and classification across silicon, organic and glass substrates. Applied said SEMVision G7AP is already deployed in production at leading memory and logic manufacturers supporting high-volume advanced packaging.
• Enhanced Centura Prime Epi introduces selective silicon germanium and silicon phosphorus epitaxy for next-generation DRAM.
• New epitaxy platform reduces fab footprint by approximately 20%, increasing tool density.
• Opta Quad CMP dynamically adjusts polishing conditions to improve hybrid bonding yields.
• Nokota VMax 2 ECD introduces Adaptive Pattern Tuning for more uniform copper deposition.
• Producer Avila 2 PECVD supports ultra-thin DRAM dies used in high-layer-count HBM stacks.
• New VeritySEM 7AP delivers sub-10 nm measurement capability on advanced packaging substrates.
• SEMVision G7AP provides automated defect review for silicon, glass and organic package materials.
• Portfolio spans DRAM fabrication, advanced packaging and process control for AI chip production.
• Applied will provide additional technical details during its DRAM and Advanced Packaging Master Class.
“The transistor and materials technologies that drove performance gains in leading-edge logic are now becoming essential in DRAM,” said Dr. Prabu Raja, President of the Semiconductor Products Group at Applied Materials. “As DRAM scales to meet the bandwidth demands of HBM and AI workloads, the distinction between logic and memory process technology is converging.”
🌐 Analysis
The announcement reflects how semiconductor capital equipment vendors are increasingly optimizing manufacturing technologies around AI-specific workloads rather than traditional transistor scaling alone. As GPU vendors continue moving toward larger HBM stacks, chiplet architectures and hybrid bonding, manufacturing precision across packaging has become just as important as advances inside the transistor itself. Applied Materials is leveraging its leadership across deposition, CMP, epitaxy and inspection to address multiple bottlenecks throughout the AI semiconductor manufacturing flow.
Applied Materials Profile Updated: June 25, 2026 | |
| Headquarters | Santa Clara, California, USA |
| CEO | Gary E. Dickerson |
| Founded | 1967 |
| Core Business | Semiconductor manufacturing equipment, materials engineering, advanced packaging and display manufacturing systems. |
| Key Technology Areas | Deposition, Etch, CMP, Epitaxy, Ion Implant, Process Control, eBeam Inspection, Packaging. |
| AI Focus | HBM manufacturing, hybrid bonding, TSVs, chiplets, heterogeneous integration and advanced process control. |
| New Systems (June 2026) | Centura Prime Epi, Opta Quad CMP, Nokota VMax 2 ECD, Producer Avila 2 PECVD, VeritySEM 7AP, SEMVision G7AP. |
| Primary Customers | Leading logic foundries, DRAM manufacturers, NAND suppliers and advanced packaging facilities worldwide. |
| Strategic Opportunity | Supplying manufacturing technology for AI GPUs, HBM, chiplets and future heterogeneous computing platforms. |



