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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (30921)6/9/1999 11:38:00 PM
From: Ian Davidson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
From the WSJ:

June 10, 1999

Intel to Speed Its Plans
To Use 12-Inch Wafers

By DEAN TAKAHASHI
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Intel Corp. said it will accelerate plans to adopt the next major generation
of semiconductor-manufacturing technology, a move likely to spur a
multibillion-dollar retooling of the industry.

The chip maker announced plans to begin manufacturing chips using silicon
wafers that are 12 inches in diameter, and incorporate other technology
advances for making cheaper, faster chips.

Intel's decision may cause rivals to accelerate their plans or risk falling
behind, and trigger a long-awaited boom for makers of semiconductor
equipment.

For consumers, the generational shift helps
ensure that steady improvements in chip
performance, known in the industry as Moore's Law, will continue.

"The industry has been waiting for somebody to step up," said Nathan
Brookwood, an analyst at Insight 64 in Saratoga, Calif. Intel's move "will
cause people to get off the dime."

Michael Splinter, an Intel vice president, said the company isn't sure
exactly how much the moves will cost, "but you can say it will be in the
billions."

Intel's Inside Swells

Intel will move to larger silicon wafers in its chip plants to boost efficiency:

Wafer diameter will increase to 12 inches from eight inches
Provides double the surface area of current eight-inch wafer
Allows for more than 2.4 times as many chips per wafer
30% lower cost of producing chips
$1.2 billion to be spent on Hillsboro, Ore., facility

Source: Intel

Intel will start by spending $1.2 billion to upgrade a research factory in
Hillsboro, Ore., with equipment that can handle 12-inch wafers. Today's
silicon wafers, which are processed with chemicals and then sliced into
individual semiconductor chips, typically are eight inches across. The
change in size roughly doubles the surface area of each wafer, and allow
2.4 times the number of chips that can be produced at one time.

Intel, Santa Clara, Calif., which expects to spend $3 billion on capital
expenditures this year, said the Oregon factory will begin deploying
equipment in early 2000. Once the initial process is refined, Intel will roll
out volume production beginning in 2002 at its other factories.

Gordon Moore, Intel's chairman emeritus, is credited with first observing
that chip performance doubles roughly every 18 months. He has said the
deployment of 12-inch wafers is likely to be the "largest industrial retooling
in history." Sematech, an industry consortium, estimates that cost at
anywhere from $14 billion to $30 billion.

Each 12-inch-chip factory is expected to cost $2.5 billion, up from about
$1.5 billion today. The newer factories will generate more revenue, but the
huge investment required could raise financial pressure on smaller
competitors, analysts say. But those who stay in the business can't afford
to be too far behind Intel, since the larger wafers could give an estimated
30% cost advantage over those produced using previous processes.

The transition was expected to start sooner. But a downturn in the chip
industry from 1996 to 1998 left manufacturers with too much production
capacity. In addition, Intel and International Business Machines Corp. had
been shying away from taking a lead in the production shift because of past
problems in trouble-shooting new processes. Except for a joint venture of
Motorola Inc. and Siemens AG in Germany, most chip makers postponed
their original plans to deploy 12-inch wafers in 1998.

Equipment makers felt even greater pain during the downturn. Besides
lower sales of existing products, many had the further burden of spending
on developing 12-inch equipment. Applied Materials Inc., the No. 1
equipment maker, has been ready to deploy a number of tools for the
12-inch wafer, but it lately had reduced its research investments because
of lack of customer commitments. Only recently have a few large chip
makers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and South
Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. began making commitments to the
retooling.

Intel said it decided to step up its plans because of progress by the tool
makers. "We were concerned the equipment wouldn't be ready, but now
believe the tool set is available from multiple suppliers," Mr. Splinter said.

In addition to launching the new wafers, Intel said it will adopt a
copper-based technology that IBM has pioneered in order to overcome
resistance problems and create faster chips. It plans to incorporate the
technology on a new manufacturing process that can make transistors just
0.13 micron across, compared with its current technology of 0.18 micron.
Mr. Splinter said Intel will phase in the new technologies to reduce its
risks.