Broadcom will join Applied Materials’ EPIC (Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization) platform as an innovation partner focused on accelerating advanced semiconductor packaging technologies for next-generation AI systems. The collaboration centers on developing packaging approaches that improve interconnect density, bandwidth, and energy efficiency for increasingly complex AI infrastructure.
The partnership reflects a broader shift in the semiconductor industry toward heterogeneous integration, where multiple chiplets, memory components, photonics elements, and accelerators are combined within tightly integrated packages. Applied Materials said the collaboration will leverage its global network of innovation centers, including the new EPIC Center in Silicon Valley, which is expected to become operational in 2026. The facility represents Applied’s largest-ever U.S. investment in semiconductor equipment R&D and aims to shorten the path from early-stage materials research to volume manufacturing.
Broadcom plans to work alongside Applied engineers on new packaging architectures and process technologies intended to improve performance-per-watt for AI systems. The companies emphasized that advanced packaging is becoming increasingly important as traditional transistor scaling alone no longer delivers sufficient system-level gains for large AI clusters and high-bandwidth computing environments.
- Applied Materials and Broadcom will collaborate on advanced packaging R&D for AI infrastructure.
- Focus areas include heterogeneous integration, chip-to-chip interconnect density, and higher bandwidth architectures.
- Broadcom joins Applied’s EPIC ecosystem to gain earlier access to new materials and process technologies.
- Applied’s EPIC Center in Silicon Valley is scheduled to become operational in 2026.
- The initiative targets faster commercialization of packaging innovations for AI accelerators and next-generation computing systems.
“The EPIC platform is designed to drive co-innovation across the ecosystem to change the way semiconductor technologies are developed and commercialized,” said Gary Dickerson, President and CEO of Applied Materials. “This new model gives leading system designers like Broadcom early access to foundational innovations in materials and process equipment, providing an opportunity for deep collaboration to accelerate the introduction of new advanced packaging technologies.”
🌐 Analysis: The announcement underscores how advanced packaging has become one of the semiconductor industry’s primary battlegrounds for AI infrastructure performance. As AI models scale, the limiting factors increasingly shift from transistor density toward memory bandwidth, chip-to-chip connectivity, thermal management, and power efficiency. This transition has elevated packaging technologies such as 2.5D integration, 3D stacking, chiplets, silicon bridges, and co-packaged optics into strategic differentiators for hyperscale AI systems.
