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To: BillyG who wrote (24932)6/1/2000 3:02:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25960
 
.13 micron process is "mandatory" for Matsushita....
eetimes.com

Matsushita, Hitachi plan system-on-chip production facilities

By Yoshiko Hara
EE Times
(05/31/00, 4:30 p.m. EST)

TOKYO ? A tight semiconductor market has encouraged Matsushita
and Hitachi to quickly expand their system-on-chip (SoC) production
capabilities with new fabrication facilities in Japan.

Matsushita Electronic Corp., the semiconductor arm of Matsushita, will
build a factory for SoC chips that target digital consumer electronics.
And Hitachi Ltd. will expand its SoC operation with a new fab
devoted
to devices featuring the H8 series of microcontroller as embedded
cores.

"Matsushita has set systems," or final products such as TV sets and
DVD players, said Susumu Koike, president of Matsushita Electronic.
"Thus our semiconductors are application oriented. To realize
high-performance system-on-chip LSIs that will give differentiating
performance to set products, a 0.13-micron process is mandatory.
As
a matter of course, we studied the possibility of a 12-inch wafer line,
but it does not meet our immediate needs."

The new fab, therefore, will use a 0.13-micron process and have a
monthly capacity of 5,000 eight-inch wafers.

Matsushita will invest about $840 million in the first-phase fab with its
12,000-square-meter clean room. It will be built at the site of the
company's Niigata fab, where the company currently produces bipolar
ICs and charge-coupled devices.

Construction of the new Matsushita facility began earlier this month.
Production is scheduled to begin in December 2001.

"It's the first phase," said a Matsushita Electronic spokesman, adding
that the company "will continue to make a 100 billion yen-level [about
$1 billion] investment every year" and that "further expansion with a
deeper process is quite possible."


Consumer mainstays

Matsushita has been positioning DVD products, digital TV sets, mobile
phones and intelligent transport systems as its four mainstays. The
new fab will produce SoC devices for these product categories.
Matsushita plans to spend $1.2 billion this fiscal year on new fab
construction.

Hitachi, for its part, will build a fab next to its Kofu works in the
Yamanashi Prefecture, alongside a facility that was erected in 1997.
The new fab, which will use a 0.35-micron process, will be a
three-story building with a clean room on each floor.

Hitachi's H8 series of 8-bit and 16-bit controllers is widely used in GSM
cellular phones, and the parts are currently in tight supply, a Hitachi
spokesman said.

Hitachi will also utilize existing lines adjacent to the new fab to beef
up its output. The first-phase line will use only one-sixth of the new
fab's clean room space, or 3,000 square meters, to fabricate 3,000
eight-inch wafer per month. Hitachi will invest about $95 million to
construct the building and install equipment for the first-phase line.
Construction is to begin in July and production is slated to start in
January.