MILPITAS, CA – Global 300mm fab equipment spending for front-end facilities next year is expected to begin a growth streak to a US$119 billion record high in 2026 following a decline in 2023, SEMI highlighted today in its quarterly 300mm Fab Outlook Report to 2026. Strong demand for high-performance computing, automotive applications and improved demand for memory will fuel double-digit spending in equipment investments over the three-year period.
After the projected 18% drop to US$74 billion this year, global 300mm fab equipment spending is forecast to rise 12% to $US82 billion in 2024, 24% to US$101.9 billion in 2025 and 17% to US$118.8 billion in 2026.
“The projected equipment spending growth wave underscores the strong secular demand for semiconductors,” said Ajit Manocha, SEMI President and CEO. “The foundry and memory sectors will figure prominently in this expansion, pointing to demand for chips across a wide breadth of end markets and applications.”
Regional Growth
Korea is expected to lead global 300mm fab equipment spending in 2026 with US$30.2 billion in investments, nearly doubling from US$15.7 billion in 2023. Taiwan is forecast to invest US$23.8 billion in 2026, up from US$22.4 billion this year, and China is projected to log US$16.1 billion in spending in 2026, an increase from US$14.9 billion in 2023. Americas equipment spending is expected to nearly double from US$9.6 billion this year to US$18.8 billion in 2026.
Segment Growth
Foundry is projected to lead other segments in equipment spending at US$62.1 billion in 2026, an increase from US$44.6 billion in 2023, followed by memory at US$42.9 billion, a 170% increase from 2023. Analog spending is forecast to increase from US$5 billion this year to US$6.2 billion in 2026. The microprocessor/microcontroller, discrete (mainly power devices), and optoelectronics segments are expected to see spending declines in 2026, while investments in logic is forecast to rise.
The SEMI 300mm Fab Outlook Report To 2026 report lists 369 facilities and lines globally, including 53 high-probability facilities expected to start operation during the four years starting in 2023.
CAMBRIDGE, UK – What do electronic skin patches, thin-film flexible photovoltaics and automotive interior consoles have in common? All are produced using printed & flexible electronics, an alternative approach to conventional printed circuit boards that combines additive manufacturing with flexible substrates. Bringing benefits such as rapid prototyping, improved sustainability, scope for form factor differentiation and even stretchability, printed & flexible electronics is gaining traction across an extremely diverse range of applications.
IDTechEx's new report "Flexible & Printed Electronics 2023-2033: Forecasts, Technologies, Markets" provides a comprehensive overview of what can seem a bewilderingly broad topic. By summarizing IDTechEx's extensive printed/flexible electronics report portfolio and drawing on years of following this developing industry, the report outlines innovations, opportunities, and trends across 5 sectors of the printed and flexible electronics market: automotive, consumer goods, energy, healthcare/wellness, and infrastructure/buildings/industrial. This analysis includes granular forecasts of 50 distinct applications and 40 detailed company profiles.
Additionally, the report outlines developments across multiple underlying technologies: 6 distinct manufacturing modalities (including in-mold electronics and flexible hybrid electronics), 5 material types (including conductive inks and component attachment materials), and 4 component types (including flexible ICs). Multiple recent examples, acquired from interviews and industry conferences, show technology development directions and successful commercialization. Assessments of technological and commercial readiness, along with additional forecasts for manufacturing methods and conductive inks, are also included.
Application Opportunities
As with conventional PCBs, printed & flexible electronics has applications across most market verticals. For example, electronic skin patches utilizing conductive inks for electrodes and contacts are already available, as are printed pressure-sensitive insoles for gait monitoring. Conformality lends itself to automotive interiors, where printed/flexible electronics is utilized for lighting, heating and touch-sensitive interfaces. Organic photovoltaics is seeing a renaissance, with recent commercial examples including both building integration and indoor energy harvesting. Sensors based on printed electronics for asset tracking and preventative maintenance promise low production costs novel form factors to suit specific requirements.
Innovations
Printed & flexible electronics represents a fundamentally different approach to manufacturing, replacing subtractive removal of laminated copper with additive deposition of conductive ink. This reduces waste and facilitates digital manufacturing with the associated benefits of rapid prototyping and straightforward design adjustments. The report evaluates a range of manufacturing innovations and their prospects, ranging from fully additive 3D electronics to in-mold electronics and emerging digital printing methods with resolutions as small as 1 μm.
Material innovations underpin many emerging hardware technologies, and printed electronics is no exception. Conductive inks underpin the technology, with dozens of companies developing inks with a range of compositions and attributes. Viscous silver-flake-based ink for screen printing dominates, but alternatives such as nano-particle and particle-free inks are gaining traction for specific applications such as EMI shielding. An especially notable trend is the development of copper ink, which promises a substantial cost reduction over its silver counterparts. Other specialized materials include ultra-low temperature solder and field-aligned anisotropic conductive adhesives enable components such as LEDs to be securely attached to cheaper, thermally fragile substrates. Furthermore, many sensors require specialist materials, such as printable piezoelectric polymers for vibration sensing and functionalized carbon nanotubes for ion detection.
While the original vision for printed and flexible electronics was to print every aspect of the circuit, including the integrated circuit, this has largely been supplanted by flexible hybrid electronics (FHE), which combines printed and mounted functionality. As such, there is an opportunity for natively flexible integrated circuits, batteries, and displays.
Building on Expertise
IDTechEx has been researching developments in the printed and flexible electronics market for well over a decade. Since then, we have stayed close to technical and commercial developments, interviewing key players worldwide, annually attending conferences such as FLEX and LOPEC, delivering multiple consulting projects, and running classes/ workshops on the topic. "Flexible & Printed Electronics 2023-2033: Forecasts, Technologies, Markets" utilizes this experience and expertise to summarize IDTechEx's knowledge and insight across the entire field.
To find out more, including downloadable sample pages, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/PE
Upcoming Free-to-Attend Webinar
Printed and Flexible Electronics: State of the Industry
Dr Matthew Dyson, Principal Technology Analyst at IDTechEx and author of this report, will be presenting a webinar on the topic on Wednesday 12 July 2023 - Printed and Flexible Electronics: State of the Industry.
This webinar will discuss the following topics:
There will be a Q&A session at the end of this webinar, where Dr Dyson will answer a few questions that have been sent in. Please send your questions to a.garrington@IDTechEx.com by Friday 7th July. Please note that there will not be time to answer all of the questions sent in.
Click here to register your place on one of our three sessions. If you are unable to make the date, please register anyway to receive the links to the on-demand recording and slides as soon as they are available!
MANASSAS, VA – ZESTRON, the leading global provider of high-precision cleaning products, services, and training solutions in the electronics manufacturing and semiconductor industries, is pleased to announce an upcoming webinar on “Enhancing Performance of Copper Pillar Interconnects through Defluxing”. The webinar will take place on June 15, 2023, at 2:00 PM EST and will be presented by Ravi Parthasarathy, Senior Application Engineer at ZESTRON Americas.
During this webinar, Ravi Parthasarathy will provide an in-depth analysis of the effectiveness of pure DI-water and a novel low-concentration cleaning agent in removing flux residues from copper pillar interconnects with 150µm bump pitch and 30µm Cu pillar height. A comparative assessment will be reviewed which was performed utilizing several analytical/functional test methodologies based on the latest IPC and JEDEC standards.
This webinar is part of the ZESTRON Academy Advanced Packaging and Power Electronics: A Webinar Series on the Latest Innovations, Cleaning, and Corrosion Challenges. Participants will have the opportunity to gain insights from a leading expert in precision cleaning solutions and learn about the latest innovations, techniques, and strategies for enhancing the performance and reliability of advanced packaging and power electronics.
Register now to secure your spot and learn more about Enhancing Performance of Copper Pillar Interconnects through Defluxing.
CHINO, CA – Scienscope International is excited to announce plans to exhibit at the SMTA Queretaro Expo & Tech Forum in Mexico on Thursday, July 13, 2023. As a prominent supplier of cabinet-style micro-focus X-ray systems in the United States, Scienscope offers a range of solutions for the production process. The Scienscope team looks forward to showcasing the company’s advanced inspection equipment and discussing Component Management, X-ray Inspection and Optical Inspection Solutions.
Scienscope’s local sales representative, Mario Montaño, will be available during the show to answer any questions regarding the company’s solutions, while Cesar Martinez will be available to discuss Optical Inspection Solutions.
Scienscope International understands the demanding requirements of modern electronics manufacturing and the company designs products to provide unparalleled precision, speed, and accuracy in detecting defects and anomalies in critical components. As a one-stop solution provider for warehouse automation, machine vision, and X-ray and optical inspection, Scienscope offers customization based on your facility's needs. Scienscope component counters can save you time and money, reduce labor, and avoid "line down" scenarios due to a lack of components.
Visit Scienscope International at the SMTA Queretaro Expo & Tech Forum to learn more about its state-of-the-art systems and find out how Scienscope International can help improve your production process. For further information, please email Scienscope at info@scienscope.com, call 1-909-590-7273, or visit www.scienscope.com
HAWTHORNE, CA – OSI Optoelectronics, a global leader in the design, development, and manufacturing of high-performance standard and custom silicon and InGaAs photodetectors, announces a broad expansion of optoelectronic solutions. The new products and services include rigid flex board and flex circuit design, manufacturing, and assembly for the most rigorous OEM specifications.
OSI’s turnkey solutions include flexible printed circuits, product-quality prototyping, ultrahigh-density designs, high-density interconnects, long-length flex circuits, box builds, surface-mount technology (SMT), cable harnesses, multilayered designs, high- and low-temperature dielectrics, hybrid solutions, flying probe, universal grid designs, lasers, LEDs, and value-added assemblies. These unique offers are scalable solutions that add value to original equipment manufacturers and prime contractors.
The company, known for its wide variety of photodetectors for medical, military, aerospace, telecommunications, semiconductor, industrial, life sciences, and consumer electronics, now provides customized, reliable optoelectronic components, electronic modules, and complex assemblies to meet the growing needs of its OEM customer base.
According to Steve Cuffel, vice president of sales and marketing, “Our custom optical sensor and detection solutions provide exceptional performance that can also be scaled up to meet the demands of any project. Our enhanced capabilities allow us to provide innovative solutions to fulfill ever-evolving OEM requirements. We continue to expand our portfolio, bringing together our company’s OEM products and services, offering them under one consolidated supplier, OSI Optoelectronics.”
To learn more about OSI’s OEM custom solutions, visit www.osioptoelectronics.com
NEEDHAM, MA, – Microwave Development Labs (MDL), a world leader in microwave components and the largest independent producer of waveguide subassemblies in the microwave industry, will be celebrating its 75th year in business at the 2023 IEEE International Microwave Symposium (IMS2023) exhibition in the San Diego Convention Center (San Diego, CA) on June 13-15, 2023.
Visitors to the show floor are invited to stop by Booth #2635 to share in the groundbreaking development of components from one of the microwave industry’s most successful firms.
The Company that Introduced the Riblet Coupler
Established in 1948 in Needham Heights, MA, MDL is a leading supplier of components and assemblies for RF, microwave, and millimeter-wave applications requiring low-loss transmission of electromagnetic (EM) energy. MDL has built an experienced, expert staff of design engineers capable of working closely with each customer’s specific electrical and mechanical specifications to meet the most demanding custom requirements.
The company’s rich history includes pioneering the Riblet coupler in 1948 for use at microwave frequencies, before that portion of the frequency spectrum was widely used for transmission of electromagnetic (EM) waves. From that innovative first year, the company has never stopped enhancing microwave coupling solutions, leading to such achievements as the thin wall monopulse comparator for the Lunar Excursion Module in the 1960’s and waveguide feed and monopulse networks for F-14 and F-15 fighter aircraft in the 1970’s.
Internally milled waveguide technology from MDL developed during the 1980’s helped reduce the size and weight of high-performance waveguide components for radar systems in F-18 fighter and B-1 bomber aircraft, long before new product development for military and aerospace customers required adherence to reduced size, weight, power, and cost (SWaP-C) trends.
Statement from Gordon Riblet
Reaching its 75th year in business, company president Gordon P. Riblet said: “We’ve made our share of parts at frequencies through 50 GHz and now we are looking to higher frequencies for such applications as 5G/6G, military & aerospace”. Riblet noted that the company has always been a leader in performance, producing high-performance components with low loss, excellent VSWR, and high power-handling capabilities, adding:
“For the first 75 years, we applied the latest test and software tools to quickly develop customers’ specialized requirements, no matter how challenging. For the next 75 years, we hope to continue to be a leader in performance and technology, helping to pave the way for system-level advances in military/aerospace, 5G/6G, and satellite communications (satcom) applications.”
ISO Certifications
MDL recently received ISO (International Organization for Standardization) 9001:2015 and Aerospace Standard 9100D certifications. The ITAR-registered company is committed to tight control of the quality management system standards and processes used in the design, fabrication, and testing of their precision waveguide components and waveguide assemblies. All products are 100% functional performance verified per the ISO 9001:2015 and AS 9100D quality management standards.