Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany launched a new high-performance computing platform built on Lenovo ThinkSystem servers and hosted at an Equinix AI-ready data center in Germany. The deployment introduces liquid-cooled HPC capacity to support research across Merck’s life science, healthcare and electronics divisions. The hybrid architecture integrates private and public cloud resources to scale compute for data-intensive workloads ranging from drug discovery to advanced materials development for next-generation semiconductor manufacturing.
Lenovo designed the system with its Neptune liquid cooling technology to improve energy efficiency for Merck’s most demanding simulations and analytics workflows. Equinix is providing the digital infrastructure foundation, including distributed AI-ready interconnection and data-sovereign compute environments that support large-scale model training, inference and collaboration across Merck’s global teams. More than 100 Equinix IBX facilities globally now support liquid-cooling deployments, enabling dense HPC clusters without exceeding power or thermal limits.
Merck aims to use the new HPC environment to cut development timelines, deepen computational modeling, and unify its research framework across business units. The platform supports AI acceleration for molecule screening, process optimization and the creation of new electronic materials for semiconductor applications, reducing fragmentation between research teams and enabling faster iteration cycles.
• HPC platform built on Lenovo ThinkSystem with Neptune liquid cooling
• Hosted at Equinix AI-ready data center in Germany
• Hybrid cloud design for flexible scaling of scientific and industrial workloads
• Supports Merck’s life science, healthcare and semiconductor-materials R&D
• Equinix provides interconnection, data-sovereign infrastructure and liquid-cooling-ready facilities across 45+ metros
“At Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, we believe that data and technology are the cornerstones of scientific progress… This platform empowers our teams to leverage AI and advanced analytics more effectively, ultimately accelerating the pace of innovation across our sectors,” said Laura Matz, Chief Science and Technology Officer.
🌐 Analysis:
This deployment highlights how large research-driven enterprises are moving toward hybrid HPC-AI environments instead of fully cloud-native models—especially when thermal density, sovereignty and predictable performance are required. It also extends Equinix’s push into AI-optimized colocation, following similar collaborations with semiconductor and biotech companies. Lenovo continues to expand Neptune-cooled HPC footprints as demand for dense compute clusters grows across pharmaceutical, materials science and chip R&D.
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