According to a report from Reuters citing industry sources, Samsung Electronics’ fifth-generation high-bandwidth memory (HBM3e) have passed tests by NVIDIA and could be used in NVIDIA’s AI processors.
The report further indicates that while no supply contract has been signed yet, one is expected soon, with potential deliveries starting in the fourth quarter of this year. The news also notes that the tested HBM3e chips are 8-layer, while Samsung’s 12-layer HBM3e have yet passed test.
However, in response to the matter, Samsung Electronics stated in a report from BusinessKorea on August 7 that they could not confirm stories related to their customers and that the report was not true.
The Samsung Electronics official cited by BusinessKorea also mentioned that, as previously stated during a conference call last month, the quality testing is still ongoing and there have been no updates since then.
Samsung had been working since last year to become a supplier of NVIDIA’s HBM3 and HBM3e. In late July, it is said that Samsung’s HBM3 has passed NVIDIA’s qualification, and would be used in the AI giant’s H20, which has been developed for the Chinese market in compliance with U.S. export controls.
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(Photo credit: Samsung)