You are here

Five 450mm Fabs will be Built by 2020, Says Semico Research

The debate over 450mm wafer manufacturing has been raging for years within the semiconductor industry. Should it happen? Will it happen? When? Who will be the first to take the plunge? Development costs and fab costs are so high that only a select few companies are even capable of making it a reality. What does that mean for the rest of the industry?  Semico Research just released a new report addressing these concerns.  

For the equipment companies, the risks are higher than ever. There are fewer potential customers for 450mm equipment, and with lower production volumes, fewer tools will be needed. How can the equipment vendors hope to recoup their development costs?

"It is true that there are fewer companies maintaining fabs, but the industry continues to demand chips with more functionality, and we need fabs to produce those chips in larger and larger volumes," said Adrienne Downey, Director of Technology Research for Semico.  "Based on our Fab Database, our Wafer Demand model, and indepth analysis of 300mm supply trends, we predict that five 450mm fabs will be built by 2020." 

But there are no guarantees. The 450mm transition will not come easily. How many more 300mm fabs will be built? What will the industry do in the meantime, before 450mm takes off? This report steps through the history of 300mm wafer adoption, the forecasted unit and wafer demand which will drive the need for more advanced capacity, and takes a rational look at what this industry needs to do to continue on the path of innovation.

The dynamics of this wafer transition cycle are not that unusual. The variable that makes this cycle slightly different is the notion that if the adoption of 450mm wafers is pushed out beyond 7nm, it is highly likely that the industry will move to a completely different manufacturing option. 

450mm Wafer Manufacturing:  The Semiconductor Industry at a Crossroads is 30 pages long, with 17 figures and 7 tables.  

For more information, contact Rick Vogelei.
Phone: (480) 435 - 8564
Email: rickv@semico.com

Add new comment

Filtered HTML

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Twitter