The Grace Hopper Superchip GH2023, announced to be in full production during GTC 200 this year, was announced by NVIDIA at the SC23 Supercomputing Conference as the computing power source for many supercomputers and will promote the development of large-scale artificial intelligence and high-performance computing.
Companies including Dell, Eviden, HPE, Lenovo, Quanta Computer, and Super Micro will use the Grace Hopper Superchip GH200 to build next-generation computing systems and help various scientific research institutions accelerate the operation of complex artificial intelligence and high-performance computing needs at the terabyte level, thereby solving various challenging computing problems.
HPE will use the Grace Hopper GH200 superchip to build the Cray EX2500 supercomputer, employing four GH4s and expanding tens of thousands of computing nodes to improve AI computing performance and execution responsiveness. Germany's Jülich Supercomputing Centre will also use the GH200 in its "JUPITER" supercomputer, making it Europe's first exascale-class supercomputer.
The Texas Advanced Computing Center in Austin, Texas, also plans to integrate the GH200 design, enabling its supercomputer, "VISTA," to achieve higher performance with higher-bandwidth memory and lower power consumption. The National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign will use the GH200 to power the DeltaAI advanced computing dataset and triple artificial intelligence computing performance. The University of Bristol, with government funding, will build the UK's most powerful supercomputer, "Isambard-AI," featuring 5000 GH200s delivering 21 exaflops of computing power.
Companies such as the Swiss National Supercomputing Center, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Softbank have all adopted the GH200 design. Companies including Aeon, ASUS, GIGABYTE, and InnoBetX Technology also plan to release server products using the GH200 design. Cloud service providers such as Lambda, Vultr, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, and CoreWeave will also launch individual computing services using the GH200.



