Applied Materials Wants to Build Chip R&D Facility in Silicon Valley

<p><strong>SANTA CLARA<&sol;strong> &&num;8212&semi; Applied Materials plans to invest at least &dollar;4 billion to build the world’s most advanced facility for collaborative semiconductor process technology and manufacturing equipment research and development &lpar;R&amp&semi;D&rpar; right in Silicon Valley&period; The project is also dependent on receiving federal funding from the &dollar;53 billion Chips Act signed last August by the Biden Administration&period; Vice President Kamala Harris was in town for the announcement&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The new Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization &lpar;EPIC&rpar; Center is planned as the heart of a high-velocity innovation platform designed to accelerate development and commercialization of the foundational technologies needed by the global semiconductor and computing industries&period; &lbrack;<strong>Photo above<&sol;strong>&colon; A rendering of the new EPIC center&period;&rpar;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To be located at an Applied campus in Silicon Valley&comma; the multibillion-dollar facility is designed to provide a breadth and scale of capabilities that is unique in the industry&comma; including more than 180&comma;000 square feet – more than three American football fields – of state-of-the-art cleanroom for collaborative innovation with chipmakers&comma; universities and ecosystem partners&period; Designed from the ground up to accelerate the pace of introducing new manufacturing innovations&comma; the new EPIC Center is expected to reduce the time it takes the industry to bring a technology from concept to commercialization by several years&comma; while simultaneously increasing the commercial success rate of new innovations and the return on R&amp&semi;D investments for the entire semiconductor ecosystem&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To create the EPIC Center&comma; Applied Materials expects to make gross&comma; incremental capital investments of up to &dollar;4 billion over the next seven years&period; The new innovation center is expected to be completed by early 2026 and become the nexus of more than &dollar;25 billion in company R&amp&semi;D investments in the first 10 years of operations&period; The center is expected to employ up to 1&comma;500 construction workers during the building period and create up to 2&comma;000 new engineering jobs in Silicon Valley and potentially another 11&comma;000 jobs in other industries&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;While semiconductors are more critical to the global economy than ever before&comma; the technology challenges our industry faces are becoming more complex&comma;” said Gary Dickerson&comma; President and CEO of Applied Materials&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;This investment presents a golden opportunity to re-engineer the way the global industry collaborates to deliver the foundational semiconductor process and manufacturing technologies needed to sustain rapid improvements in energy-efficient&comma; high-performance computing&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Addressing Industry Challenges<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Tremendous growth in the number of connected devices and the rise of artificial intelligence are driving increasing demand for chips and the opportunity for a &dollar;1 trillion semiconductor market&period; At the same time&comma; chipmakers face significant challenges to sustain the pace of innovation required to meet this demand&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;angstrom era” of chipmaking requires new foundational manufacturing technologies that are orders of magnitude more complex than those used today&period; This increased complexity drives higher R&amp&semi;D and manufacturing costs&comma; while lengthening the time it takes to develop and commercialize new semiconductor technology through high-volume manufacturing&period; Further hurdles include a critical shortage of technical talent needed by the industry and the pressing need to reduce the carbon intensity of the electronics industry&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Accelerating Chipmaker Roadmaps<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For decades&comma; chipmakers have relied on rapid advances in foundational semiconductor technology to deliver continued improvements in chip performance&comma; power&comma; area&comma; cost and time-to-market &lpar;PPACt&rpar;&period; Billions of dollars are invested each year to drive new inflections in the way chipmakers create&comma; shape&comma; modify&comma; analyze and connect materials and structures at the atomic scale&period; Once developed&comma; these technologies must be proven to work reliably and cost-effectively in the industrial-scale equipment for high-volume manufacturing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While these technology inflections continue to drive the industry forward&comma; the sheer complexity of the engineering challenges requires a new approach to R&amp&semi;D&period; The traditional development model&comma; starting with materials engineering equipment and process innovation&comma; is a serial&comma; compartmentalized process with no central hub for collaboration across the ecosystem&period; The industry needs a new model that breaks down traditional silos&comma; builds denser networks of collaboration&comma; and delivers tighter feedback loops that can increase the speed and lower the cost of innovation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Applied’s new EPIC Center is designed to be a premier platform for leading logic and memory chipmakers to collaborate with the equipment ecosystem&period; For the first time&comma; chipmakers can have their own dedicated space within an equipment supplier facility&comma; extending their in-house pilot lines and providing early access to next-generation technologies and tools – months or even years before equivalent capabilities can be installed at their facilities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Strengthening University Pipelines<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The platform is also expected to be a catalyst for accelerating the commercialization of academic research and strengthening the pipeline of future semiconductor industry talent&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Universities are uniquely skilled at ideating new concepts&comma; but they often lack access to state-of-the-art industrial labs and hardware which can impede their ability to turn ideas into commercial reality&period; Applied’s new platform can provide university researchers access to the full range of industrial-scale capabilities to validate their ideas&comma; increasing the success rate of innovations and reducing the time and cost of commercializing new technologies&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This would be achieved with a two-pronged approach&period; University researchers can perform research alongside industry professionals in the new EPIC Center&comma; and Applied can collaborate with academic partners to build a network of industrial-quality satellite labs at university facilities&period; The new approach is designed to build upon Applied’s existing relationships with top engineering schools&comma; such as Arizona State University&comma; where Applied has been conducting research in materials science and semiconductor technology alongside faculty and students&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;We’re all-in as an asset to industry and to the nation as we seek to regain global pre-eminence in semiconductor manufacturing&comma; research and development&comma;” said ASU President Michael Crow&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Applied Materials is providing extraordinary leadership to accelerate innovation and commercialization of foundational manufacturing technologies that will define the future of how chips are made&period; And as we continue to innovate in that process&comma; ASU will bring research expertise and help create the future innovation and manufacturing talent pipeline that will be critical over the long term&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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