-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- I-Connect007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current Issue
Beyond the Rulebook
What happens when the rule book is no longer useful, or worse, was never written in the first place? In today’s fast-moving electronics landscape, we’re increasingly asked to design and build what has no precedent, no proven path, and no tidy checklist to follow. This is where “Design for Invention” begins.
March Madness
From the growing role of AI in design tools to the challenge of managing cumulative tolerances, these articles in this issue examine the technical details, design choices, and manufacturing considerations that determine whether a board works as intended.
Looking Forward to APEX EXPO 2026
I-Connect007 Magazine previews APEX EXPO 2026, covering everything from the show floor to the technical conference. For PCB designers, we move past the dreaded auto-router and spotlight AI design tools that actually matter.
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - I-Connect007 Magazine
Webinar Review, Part 1: A Packaging Revolution Powering the Next Era of AI Compute
March 15, 2026 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
The rapid rise of artificial intelligence has fundamentally reshaped the demands placed on semiconductor technology, and nowhere is it more evident than in advanced electronic packaging. A recent episode of the Global Electronics Association’s Executive Pulse webinar series, featuring Dr. Hemanth Dhavaleswarapu of AMD as the first of two esteemed presenters, provided a comprehensive overview of chip-level packaging.
He outlined the evolution of AI workloads in forcing a rethinking of everything from chip architecture to data center design, with packaging now playing a central role in enabling continued performance scaling.
Large language models, he said, are at the heart of the challenge, having become some of the most compute- and memory-intensive workloads in existence. As models grow larger, incorporate richer modalities such as images and video, and rely on longer context lengths and techniques like retrieval-augmented generation, their appetite for memory capacity and bandwidth surges.
New approaches, including lower-precision data types, Dr. Dhavaleswarapu continued, help manage memory footprints, but they do not reduce the need for fast, low-latency access to vast quantities of data. At the same time, he emphasized that emerging trends like agentic AI, reinforcement learning, and mixture-of-expert models introduce new communication demands between GPUs, making high-speed interconnects a critical system-level requirement.
These pressures have pushed GPUs to the forefront of data center computing, driving dramatic increases in power consumption. While CPU power has largely plateaued due to air-cooling constraints, GPU power has risen sharply, especially following the surge in interest in generative AI. Individual GPUs now operate at kilowatt-class power levels, while racks are approaching or exceeding hundreds of kilowatts. This escalation has made liquid cooling not just advantageous, but essential, and has introduced new challenges related to flow rates, pressure drops, inlet temperatures, and the mechanical weight of fully populated racks.
Against this backdrop, advanced packaging has become a key enabler of continued performance growth. Dr. Dhavaleswarapu traced AMD’s journey from early multi-chip approaches to today’s sophisticated 2.5D and 3.5D architectures. He said that by integrating multiple dies and high-bandwidth memory into a single package, these approaches enable massive increases in compute density and memory capacity. In fact, packaging-driven integration has delivered orders-of-magnitude growth in total compute and memory area that would be impossible through silicon scaling alone, effectively extending and surpassing the traditional expectations of Moore’s Law.
Looking ahead, he said future systems will push integration even further, incorporating domain-specific accelerators, co-packaged optics, and other components into ever-larger modules. These designs aim to deliver higher bandwidth at lower energy per bit, but they also demand new manufacturing approaches. As chip modules grow beyond the practical limits of wafer-level processing, panel-level manufacturing becomes increasingly attractive. If offers improved throughput and cost efficiency for large-format packages.
He emphasized that three-dimensional interconnect technologies are advancing rapidly to support these trends. Hybrid bonding, finer interconnect pitches, and wafer-to-wafer bonding are enabling denser vertical integration, while backside power delivery networks promise improved power efficiency through nanoscale through-silicon vias (TSVs). Together, these innovations are essential for managing the power and signal integrity challenges of trillion-transistor-class packages.
Substrates, he added, represent another critical bottleneck. As packages grow in size and complexity, substrates must fan out ever-increasing numbers of signals while reliably delivering power and maintaining mechanical stability. This is driving demand for ultra-large substrates with higher layer counts, low-loss dielectric materials, smoother copper surfaces for high-speed signaling, and improved thermal and mechanical properties to manage warpage and stress.
Throughout the presentation, Dr. Dhavaleswarapu emphasized that these challenges cannot be solved in isolation. Thermal performance, structural integrity, power delivery, and signal integrity are tightly coupled, and optimizing one often impacts the others. Addressing this complexity requires advanced multiphysics simulation and co-design tools that span silicon, package, board, and system levels. Yet today’s toolchains remain fragmented to some extent , he said, relying on custom workflows and data translations, and highlighting the need for standardized formats and more integrated EDA solutions.
Finally, we learned that the scale and complexity of advanced packaging have significant implications for the supply chain. Innovation is required across every element of the ecosystem, from materials and substrates to inspection, test, and cooling technologies. Because different suppliers advance at different rates, supply chain resiliency has become a strategic concern, particularly as AI-driven demand accelerates and new fabrication capacity comes online. Supporting this growth will require sustained investment in workforce development to ensure the talent needed to design, build, and operate next-generation semiconductor infrastructure is available.
It was a lot to pack into 20 minutes, but Dr. Dhavaleswarapu’s presentation made clear that advanced electronic packaging is no longer a supporting technology, but a central pillar of AI system performance, something the Global Electronics Association’s CTO Matt Kelly has been speaking about for many months. As AI workloads continue to scale, packaging innovation will be essential to delivering the compute, memory, power efficiency, and reliability that modern data centers demand.
Testimonial
"In a year when every marketing dollar mattered, I chose to keep I-Connect007 in our 2025 plan. Their commitment to high-quality, insightful content aligns with Koh Young’s values and helps readers navigate a changing industry. "
Brent Fischthal - Koh YoungSuggested Items
Indium to Showcase High-Performance AI Application Solutions at SEMICON SEA 2026
05/01/2026 | Indium CorporationAs a leading provider of advanced materials solutions for today’s demanding AI applications, Indium Corporation® will feature its high-reliability product portfolio at SEMICON SEA 2026, May 5-7, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
STMicroelectronics Enables Always-On Vision with Ultralow-Power Image Sensors
05/01/2026 | STMicroelectronicsSTMicroelectronics, a global semiconductor leader serving customers across the spectrum of electronics applications, introduces a new generation of ultralow-power global-shutter image sensors that deliver high-quality, always-on vision to compact devices operating on batteries or harvested energy.
onsemi, Geely Expand Strategic Collaboration to Elevate the Driving Experience
05/01/2026 | onsemionsemi and Geely Auto Group today announced an expanded global strategic collaboration aimed at accelerating the development of next-generation electric and hybrid vehicles.
Alpha, Omega Semiconductor Launches SmartClamp DrMOS for AI Servers and GPUs
05/01/2026 | AlphaAlpha and Omega Semiconductor Limited (AOS) a designer, developer, and global supplier of a broad range of discrete power devices, wide bandgap power devices, power management ICs, and modules, announced the launch of the SmartClamp™ family of protected DrMOS.
Infineon Technology Demonstrates Proven Reliability in Space on Artemis II Mission
04/21/2026 | InfineonNASA's Artemis II mission has successfully returned to Earth after ten days in space, having approached the Moon and reached the farthest distance from our planet ever achieved by crewed spaceflight.