Applied Materials and GlobalFoundries (GF) are teaming up to advance photonics manufacturing for next-generation AI and augmented reality (AR) applications. The companies announced plans to establish a dedicated waveguide fabrication facility at GF’s Singapore campus, marking a step toward high-volume production of optical components that will underpin AI-powered AR devices.
Applied will focus on developing advanced waveguide technologies, while GF will provide its semiconductor manufacturing expertise to scale production. The partners emphasized that photonics is becoming essential for AR glasses and human-centric digital experiences that require lightweight, power-efficient, and high-performance optics. The facility will tap into Singapore’s growing photonics ecosystem, which includes expertise in materials, sensors, integration, and testing.
The initiative strengthens GF’s role in the global photonics supply chain and extends Applied’s leadership in materials engineering to AI-driven display and optical systems. Together, the companies aim to accelerate adoption of AR platforms and next-generation AI-enabled devices.
- Applied Materials and GF will build a waveguide fabrication facility at GF Singapore
- Focus on AI-powered photonics and AR glasses requiring advanced optical systems
- Applied provides materials engineering expertise, GF delivers high-volume manufacturing
- Collaboration leverages Singapore’s photonics ecosystem for integration and testing
- Target: scalable production of ultra-efficient, lightweight optical components
“Photonics is rapidly becoming a critical enabler of augmented reality glasses that put humans at the center of the AI experience, and Applied Materials is uniquely positioned to lead this transformation,” said Dr. Paul Meissner, Vice President and General Manager of Applied Materials’ Photonics Platforms Business.
🌐 Analysis: Applied Materials is extending its materials engineering know-how into photonics for AI and AR, an area where waveguide quality is critical for device performance and adoption. Partnering with GF anchors this effort in Singapore, which is positioning itself as a regional hub for photonics manufacturing and R&D. The move parallels similar pushes from Intel, Meta, and others investing in optical components for AR glasses and AI-driven human interfaces, signaling that photonics is becoming a strategic battleground for next-generation consumer and enterprise devices.
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