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[News] Samsung’s HBM3e Reportedly Passed NVIDIA’s Certification Though It Denies the Rumor


2024-07-04 Semiconductors editor

In early June, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang revealed that Samsung’s High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) is still striving on the certification process, but is one step away from beginning supply. On July 4th, a report from Korea media outlet Newdaily indicated that Samsung has finally obtained approval from the GPU giant for qualification of its 5th generation HBM, HBM3e. It is expected that Samsung will soon proceed with the subsequent procedures to officially start mass production for HBM supply, the report noted.

Citing sources from the semiconductor industry, the report stated that Samsung recently received the HBM3e quality test PRA (Product Readiness Approval) notification from NVIDIA. It is expected that negotiations for supply will commence afterward.

However, just one hour after the news reported that Samsung’s HBM3e passed NVIDIA’s tests, another media outlet, Hankyung, noted that Samsung has denied the rumor, clarifying it is “not true,” and that the company is consistently undergoing quality assessments.

TrendForce reports that Samsung is still collaborating with NVIDIA and other major customers on the qualifications for both 8-hi and 12-hi HBM3e products. The successful qualification mentioned in the article was only an internal achievement for Samsung. Samsung anticipates that its HBM3e qualification will be partially completed by the end of 3Q24.

Per a previous report from Reuters, Samsung has been attempting to pass NVIDIA’s tests for HBM3 and HBM3e since last year, while a test for Samsung’s 8-layer and 12-layer HBM3e chips was said to fail in April.

According to the latest report from Newdaily, Samsung’s breakthrough came about a month after the memory heavyweight sent executives in charge of HBM and memory development to the U.S. at NVIDIA’s request. Previously, it was reported that Samsung had failed to pass the quality test as scheduled due to issues such as overheating.

The report further stated that though from Samsung’s perspective, supplying HBM to NVIDIA was crucial, NVIDIA is also eager to receive more HBM, with the overwhelming demand for AI semiconductors and the impending mass production of its next-generation GPU Rubin, which significantly increases HBM usage.

According to the report, Samsung is expected to eliminate uncertainties in HBM and start full-scale mass production, giving a significant boost to its memory business. There are also suggestions that its HBM performance could see a quantum leap starting in the second half of the year.

On the other hand, Samsung’s major rival, SK hynix, is the primary supplier of NVIDIA’s HBM3 and HBM3e. According to an earlier TrendForce’s analysis, NVIDIA’s upcoming B100 or H200 models will incorporate advanced HBM3e, while the current HBM3 supply for NVIDIA’s H100 solution is primarily met by SK hynix.

According to a report from the Financial Times in May, SK hynix has successfully reduced the time needed for mass production of HBM3e chips by 50%, while close to achieving the target yield of 80%.

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(Photo credit: Samsung)

Please note that this article cites information from Newdaily and hankyung.

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