pubs.cmpnet.com
Semiconductor Business News, c 1998, CMP Media Inc. June 1, 1998
Battle to install digital bus lines heats up in fabs
By Jack Robertson
WASHINGTON -- The growing complexities of operating new generations of wafer fabs are forcing major changes in how the equipment is linked together.
Digital bus lines are now regarded as almost essential for upcoming 300-mm wafer production fabs. The extensive use of automated handling systems will require a vast number of I/O data points and will far surpass what conventional single-tool wiring can handle, pointed out John Dunn, marketing vice president for MKS Instruments Inc., a Santa Clara, Calif.-based maker of tool gauges and valves.
The number of I/O ports on new 200-mm wafer fabs is also skyrocketing. A new cluster tool may have more than a thousand I/O data points, he noted. "A digital bus line is the only feasible way to connect within the cluster as well as interconnect clusters and other parts of the production line," Dunn said.
As a result, a fierce marketing battle is developing among the suppliers of digital bus lines to interconnect cluster tools and eventually entire fab production lines.
Unable to agree on a single bus-line standard, Sematech and Semiconductor Equipment & Materials International (SEMI) so far have blessed three different schemes, leaving it up to the marketplace to pick the eventual winner. The three bus line vendors fighting it out now are DeviceNet, a spinoff from Rockwell International Automation Corp.; Echelon Corp.'s LonWorks; and Honeywell Automation Smart Distributed System (SDS). Suppliers of at least three more bus lines are trying to get Sematech's okay to enter the fight.
Bus line connections are quickly replacing individual wiring of tools within a fab, said MKS Instruments' Dunn. He estimated that bus-line use on semiconductor production equipment is growing at the rate of 49% annually. "As chip makers go to smaller and smaller line geometries and add more cluster tools, they need the much higher OEE [overall equipment effectiveness] that digital bus lines bring," Dunn said.
The effectiveness of bus-line-equipped tools is now reaching 38% for the new quarter-micron processes, Dunn said, which is up dramatically from an OEE of less than 20% for conventional tool sets. The goal of bus-line systems is to reach a 60% OEE for 0.15-micron feature-size processing.
One important role for the new digital bus lines is to provide the diagnostic feedback on tool operation for troubleshooting, said Dave Heller, product manager for Rockwell Automation's DeviceNet unit in Milwaukee, Wis. If a tool goes down now, the entire fab is usually shut down until the problem is diagnosed and corrected. Since the average cost of downtime on a fab line ranges from $20,000 to $40,000 per hour, any lengthy shutdown to correct a tool problem can be devastating, he noted.
Bus lines can also monitor performance continually on any tool on the line. Operators usually can prevent a shutdown because they can detect a problem coming and take corrective action before it occurs. If a tool does shut down, data collected on its earlier runs can help operators speedily diagnose the problem and get the tool up and running quickly, according to Heller.
More often than not, it's a glitch in the software, not the tool, that's causing a problem. "We have found that in more than 70% of the time, the shutdown problem can be traced to the software," the Rockwell Automation official said. The bus lines can also help out a lot by ensuring that software is always running correctly and by instantly detecting any software problem that pops up.
Bus lines also permit a "hot swap" of a new tool to replace a malfunctioning tool on the line. This job can be done so that little or no downtime results on the line. With conventional lines using individual wiring to link tools, it can often take days to make such a switch, Heller added.
But even with such advantages, switching to digital buses won't happen without plenty of missionary work. "A lot of education needs to take place within the industry about semiconductor equipment automated controllers," commented Phil Naughton, new construction engineering project manager for Motorola Inc.'s Semiconductor Products Sector in Austin, Tex. "They can save money for everybody."
Motorola is both a LonWorks supplier and a user. It makes some of the components used in the control nodes and already is using the format in at least five of its global manufacturing sites. The big chip maker is using LonWorks technology - which is not limited to the chip industry but is designed for most industrial applications - to control a variety of applications in its fabs. These include controlling equipment and process controls, ventilation, and fire alarms.
Motorola wants to see more chip production equipment designed to work in LonWorks-equipped fabs. "We have taken the position that if you want to sell equipment like chillers to us, then you are going to have to develop products using this type of automated controls," pointed out Naughton.
In the race to install digital buses, Echelon, in Palo Alto, Calif., had the largest number of installations as of last year with 190 LonWorks systems running. DeviceNet was in second place with 122 systems, according to a study by MKS Instruments.
MKS, which has switched entirely to DeviceNet for its tools, estimated that by 2002 the number of installed Rockwell buses will surpass those of LonWorks. It estimated that DeviceNet will have 903 installed systems by that year, with LonWorks selling 648, and Honeywell's SDS hitting 275 systems. According to MKS, 85% of all chip production-tool vendors have picked the DeviceNet digital bus.
Several years ago, Rockwell made DeviceNet an open standard to encourage its widespread use. DeviceNet is also being used as a bus line in a vast array of different manufacturing operations in addition to the semiconductor industry. "Our return is selling Rockwell Automation tools in other factory applications," said one official at Rockwell, which doesn't have a large presence in the semiconductor equipment field.
Considering the higher yields that chip makers can obtain using the digital bus, the bus and node controllers are very low in cost. A typical node controller can cost as little as $200. "It is a fantastic investment," said Dave Ittner, Rockwell Automation chip industry product specialist in Milwaukee, "with the cost of the bus line being only a small consideration." --Additional reporting by Will Wade |