Sandia Labs Faces Supply Challenges as AI Chipmakers Shift Focus Away from Nuclear Security Needs

May 18, 2026
Sandia Labs Faces Supply Challenges as AI Chipmakers Shift Focus Away from Nuclear Security Needs
  • AMD has released scientific-computing chips, but there are concerns AI-optimized architectures and memory models may not meet Sandia’s future double-precision needs.

  • James Laros emphasizes keeping options open to ensure mission needs never risked, given the non-optional nature of nuclear security work.

  • Sandia is collaborating with Penguin Solutions to integrate NextSilicon’s chips into a supercomputer, with a milestone indicating readiness to test on demanding nuclear-security simulations later this year.

  • The program will evaluate this fall whether NextSilicon’s chips pass more demanding tests resembling real nuclear-security workloads.

  • Double-precision floating-point performance remains a critical concern, as it’s essential for certain physics simulations and may not be optimally served by AI-optimized chips.

  • Sandia National Laboratories at Kirtland Air Force Base relies on liquid-cooled high-performance supercomputers to simulate nuclear weapons physics, but faces supply challenges as AI-focused chipmakers shift priorities.

  • Nvidia remains involved with Sandia for scientific computing, indicating a mixed ecosystem rather than a full replacement of traditional suppliers.

  • Officials caution about double-precision performance and supply reliability, underscoring the need for multiple procurement options to ensure mission readiness.

  • NextSilicon’s approach features double-precision capable chips, a data-flow architecture to reduce memory shuffling, and on-the-fly reprogrammability to improve efficiency.

  • NextSilicon’s data-flow architecture reduces memory movement and energy use, with self-reprogrammability to boost efficiency, aiming to balance AI and scientific workloads.

  • A key technical milestone was reached, moving NextSilicon’s chips closer to potential use in government systems for nuclear-security work.

  • There is ongoing concern about double-precision performance, a strength of Nvidia and AMD in scientific computing, for future workloads.

Summary based on 6 sources


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