AI systems company Groq announced it has contracted with Samsung’s US-based foundry business to be its silicon partner for Groq’s product roadmap.
Groq said its next-gen silicon, to be designed in partnership with Samsung’s Foundry Design Service team and manufactured by Samsung on its SF4X process (4nm), will utilize the first-gen Tensor Streaming architecture. Groq said it is set to improve throughput, latency, power consumption, hardware footprint and memory capacity. Additional technology and architectural improvements will increase the Language Processor Unit system’s interconnect bandwidth, enabling Groq to build systems ranging from 85,000 to more than 600,000 chips, without external switches and with more cross-sectional bandwidth than today’s exascale supercomputers, according to the company.
Jonathan Ross, CEO and founder of Groq, stated, “The first-gen Groq LPU was built for AI from the ground up, enabling Groq to consistently outperform graphics processors on AI and ML tasks. Our partnership with Samsung will allow us to continue that leap forward, by tapping into the most advanced semiconductor manufacturing technologies available.”
Marco Chisari, EVP of Samsung Electronics, Head of Samsung’s US Foundry business and Head of Samsung Semiconductor Innovation Center shared, “Samsung Foundry is committed to advancing semiconductor technology and bringing groundbreaking AI, HPC, and data center solutions to market. This relationship with Groq is another proof point of how we’re using our advanced silicon manufacturing nodes to bring new AI innovation to market.”
Semiconductor company Samsung Electronics is headquartered in South Korea and has a new fab under construction in Taylor, Texas, neighboring its first US semiconductor manufacturing facility in Austin, which broke ground in 1996. Working with Samsung further strengthens Groq’s already completely North American-based operations for engineering and manufacturing, and will help maintain its high product availability and short lead times.