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Q: semiconductor industry ( Answered 5 out of 5 stars,   2 Comments )
Question  
Subject: semiconductor industry
Category: Computers > Hardware
Asked by: thud-ga
List Price: $25.00
Posted: 02 Sep 2002 11:09 PDT
Expires: 02 Oct 2002 11:09 PDT
Question ID: 60964
What is the approximate number of semiconductor wafers manufactured
per year in the USA and in the World?  How many days does it take to
make a finished wafer on average starting with a bare wafer?  I
realize that the time will vary greatly so just a range – say 2- 10
days or whatever will serve as an answer.

Request for Question Clarification by larre-ga on 02 Sep 2002 14:44 PDT
Wafer production statistics are given in wafer starts per X. End
result statistics are expressed as  'chips' or "transistors" per X.
This difference is due to the high production wastage per wafer, which
varies significantly with the type and complexity of each circuit. 
Are these differing formats acceptable?

Production times - wafers are never 'finished' as whole units. Do you
wish the time from start to dicing (scribe), or time from start to
finished chip (includes the assembly process)?

=l=

Clarification of Question by thud-ga on 02 Sep 2002 16:28 PDT
Wafer starts is what I am looking for.  I only want time to start to
dicing.  Thanks for any help.
Answer  
Subject: Re: semiconductor industry
Answered By: omnivorous-ga on 02 Sep 2002 18:13 PDT
Rated:5 out of 5 stars
 
How a semiconductor gets manufactured is an interesting process,
well-documented on several websites.  Sematech, an industry
consortium, describes the process simply in 9 steps, from growing the
silicon ingot to dicing the individual ICs:
http://www.sematech.org/public/news/mfgproc/mfgproc.htm 

Infrastructure, an electronics industry publication, describes the
growing of the silicon ingot over a 24-hour period on this web page:
http://www.infras.com/Tutorial/sld002.htm

Once the ingot is grown, it cools and is ground down to the size
required by the wafer slicers, which are actually diamond saws.  Once
sliced into wafers, they are market with an ID number by laser.   The
wafers are too rough for production yet, so they also must be
polished.  The entire process of growing the ingot, marking, slicing
and polishing takes less than one week.  This is a Department of
Energy technical article showing additional information, such as yield
losses at each level of processing:
http://www.nrel.gov/silicon/Nmulticrs.htm

According to Intersil, a semiconductor manufacturer, the balance of
the process of getting from wafer to die is another 10-30 days,
depending on the process:
http://rel.intersil.com/docs/lexicon/manufacture.html

So the total crystal-to-die process is done in a 17-37 day period!

For an interesting and detailed look at producing ICs, the Industry
Initiatives for Science and Math Education (IISME) produced this
step-by-step introduction to the process.  It’s well supported by
photographs of each step:
http://iisme.org/etp/Silicon_Wafer_Processing.pdf


Now: how many are produced each year?  The Semiconductor Industry
Association (www.semichips.org) produces quarterly reports, so you
detailed reports are publicly available.  The numbers are for merchant
IC manufacturers, which the SIA notes are “the great majority of the
world’s IC production.”  Not covered are captive manufacturers, such
as IBM Microelectronics, which produces some integrated circuits for
use in IBM computers.

The report through Q2, 2002 has lots of detail and shows that wafer
starts are down this year over 2001.   In 2001, there were about 5.2
million wafers produced in 8” equivalents.  The industry is using 8”
equivalents because over half of the production is now in 8” wafers;
7% in newer 300mm (or 12”); and the balance in 5” wafers.  Details are
on the SIA website here:
http://www.semichips.org/downloads/SICASQ22002.pdf

Please note that 8” wafers have a surface area of almost 50 square
inches, while 5” wafers have an area of 19.5” – so it takes about 2 ½
5” wafers to produce as many die as the larger wafers.

Though market share for semiconductors is available, with the SIA
giving the U.S. 51% of the world’s $139 billion market, numbers for
U.S. production of wafers don’t appear to be available.  Major
suppliers, such as Shin-Etsu Chemical, which claims 25% of the world
wafer market, often produce silicon ingots wherever customers are
located.  Shin-Etsu has two plants in Louisiana, in addition to
factories in Japan.

The computer research organization Gartner Group tracks semiconductor
and equipment sales, but apparently its figures by country don’t seem
to be available on the ‘Net:
http://www3.gartner.com/1_researchanalysis/focus_areas/semiconductors/semimkt_fa.html

Gartner Group and VLSI Research, another market research firm tracking
the semiconductor industry, introduce another way of looking at wafer
production – using millions of square inches.  In 2002, VLSI and
Gartner both foresee growth to between 4 million square inches (VLSI)
and 4.7 million square inches.  The business will continue to grow by
11-12% per year for the next five years, both companies forecast.

Semiconductor sales by region are detailed by SIA, showing market
shares over a 10-year period here:
http://www.semichips.org/downloads/ACF14E.PDF

I hope that you find these web links as interesting as I did!
thud-ga rated this answer:5 out of 5 stars

Comments  
Subject: Re: semiconductor industry
From: omnivorous-ga on 03 Sep 2002 08:02 PDT
 
Thud -- thank you for the rating!  All of the Google researchers like
to know how close they're getting to the customer's requirements.

My screen is showing some block characters where quotation marks
should be, so I thought that re-entering one section might make it
easier to read:

In 2001, there were about 5.2 million wafers produced in 8”
equivalents.  The industry is using 8-inch equivalents because over
half of the production is now in 8 inch wafers; 7% in newer 300mm (or
12 inch); and the balance in 5 inch wafers.  Details are on the SIA
website here:
http://www.semichips.org/downloads/SICASQ22002.pdf 
 
Please note that 8 inch wafers have a surface area of almost 50 square
inches, while 5 inch wafers have an area of 19.5 square inches – so it
takes about 2 ½ 5 inch wafers to produce as many die as the larger
wafers.
Subject: Re: semiconductor industry
From: thud-ga on 03 Sep 2002 09:56 PDT
 
Something in the numbers did not make sense since infoworld (
http://www.infoworld.com/articles/hn/xml/02/07/01/020701hnpc.xml)
reported:
"In 2000, the industry's best year to date, approximately 132 million
PCs were shipped worldwide..."  Since each PC surely had 5-10 sq.
inches (a wild guess) of chips then there had to be 500 to 1 billion
sq. inches of chips JUST IN PC'S.
LOOK FURTHER AT THE DATA IN THE DATA AT:
http://www.semichips.org/downloads/SICASQ22002.pdf
YOU WILL SEE THAT THE STATISTICS GIVEN ARE IN WAFER STARTS PER WEEK--
NOT QTR TOTALS AS OMNIVOROUS-GA ASSUMED.  THUS SINCE THERE ARE 13
WEEKS/ QTR THEN THE ANSWERS ARE OFF BY A FACTOR OF 13 SO THE 5.2M  8"
EQUIV BECOMES 67.6M WHICH GIVES 3.4 BILLION SQ INCHES TOTAL.  THIS
JIVES WITH THE PC ONLY NUMBER ABOVE.  AM I READING THIS CORRECTLY?

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