Çelikler için
Paslanmaz çelikler için
Dökme demir için
Demir icermeyen metaller icin
Kesimi zor malzemeler için
Sertleştirilmiş malzemeler için
-The hottest semiconductor production equipment on the market-
Japan was once the world’s top producer of semiconductors
The majority of Japan-made semiconductors in the 1980s were DRAM, which accounted for 50 % of the world’s share. However, following economic conflict between the United States and Japan over trade in semiconductors*1, Japan delayed shifting to logic semiconductors and surrendered the leading seat to manufacturers in other countries such as Intel Corporation (United States), TSMC (Taiwan), and Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (Korea) (Fig.1).
Japan has the world’s largest number of semiconductor production sites
Japan currently produces logic and power semiconductors called legacy semiconductors whose line width is between 28 and 130 nm*2 although current production sites were reorganized through international alliances, etc.
In terms of leading-edge semiconductors, production of high-end circuit patterns with line widths of 5 to 16 nm for smartphones, DC*3, and 5G have rapidly grown due to global digitalization. Demand for middle-range semiconductors with line widths of from 20 to 40 nm has also expanded globally due to the increase in production of automobiles, industrial machinery and home appliances. This has the effect of accelerating technical innovation and the enhancement of production capability through national strategies for the stable supply of semiconductors. Japan has also implemented measures that prioritize semiconductor industries to compensate for the last 30 years.
Semiconductor production equipment (SPE) essential for the manufacture of leading-edge semiconductors
While the production of semiconductors has been dominated by countries overseas, Japanese semiconductor production equipment (SPE) has maintained world-class quality through the accumulation of technological improvement and has been employed as the essential component for high-end ultra-precision semiconductor manufacture with production exceeding 30 % of the global share. The Semiconductor Equipment Association of Japan (SEAJ) predicted that SPE sales in FY2021 will mark a record high exceeding 3.3 trillion yen, an increase of 40 % from the previous year. This shows that Japan-made semiconductors have extremely high quality.
*Note 1: In the 1980s, the United States complained that prices of semiconductors made in Japan violated anti-dumping laws. In September 1986, the U.S.-Japan Semiconductor Agreement was signed to address the issue.
*Note 2: 1 nm equals 1 / 1 billionth of a meter.
*Note 3: The Data Center specializes in the operation of a wide variety of computers and devices for data communication.
Semiconductor manufacturing is largely classified into the front-end process, in which circuits are formed on the surface of a wafer, and the back-end process, which include cutting of the wafer into chips, then inspection and packaging.
In the front-end process, similar to the principles of photography, the circuit pattern is projected onto the wafer using lithography technology and insulators and semiconductors are partially processed through repeated etching and deposition. Improving the yield rate is important for competitiveness, and this requires high-clean environment and ultra-precision and high-performance operations, therefore highly reliable Japanese semiconductor production and inspection equipment are broadly used (Fig. 3).
Coating equipment (global share: 90 %), CVD equipment (global share: 30 %), and etching equipment (global share: 30 %) in particular show the technical capability of Japanese made equipment. A large number of chemical agents are used in vacuum in the front-end process because they must be highly heat and corrosion resistant.
Parts are made of a wide range of materials, from general materials such as aluminium alloy, stainless steel and FCD through to Inconel, Kovar and other difficult-to-cut materials such as ceramics, single crystal silicon, silicon carbide, quartz glass and other hard brittle materials.
Mitsubishi Materials has a wide variety of products designed to machine a broad range of applications using accumulated materials and forming technology. The MP9 insert series for difficult-to-cut materials, the AXD cutter series for aluminium alloy and difficult-to-cut material machining, the DC drill for hard brittle material machining and the DF solid end mill series in particular have been highly regarded by a wide range of customers. We continue to deliver a product line-up that achieves high-performance and high-efficiency machining of aluminium and other non-ferrous metals and difficult-to-cut materials.
Sales of Japanese semiconductor production equipment is predicted to continue breaking records every year until FY2023 (Fig. 4). In addition, the Japanese government decided to support enticement of TSMC for the manufacture of leading-edge semiconductors (22-28 nm) and construction of new plants in Kumamoto. The government also decided to support the repair and expansion of legacy semiconductor manufacturing bases. Government support for semiconductor manufacturing that prioritizes economic security serves as a tailwind that expands the demand for semiconductor production equipment.
Japan-made semiconductor production equipment sales prediction between FY2021 and 2023 (Revision)
Mitsubishi Materials manufactures production equipment parts and materials such as silicon products and plating solutions for the back-end process and can promptly respond to requests from equipment manufacturers.
In other words, Mitsubishi Materials is the only manufacturer in the world capable of not only commercializing parts and materials, but also providing machining solutions by synchronizing machining technology from the research and development stage for new materials.
From now onwards, we need to advance technical innovation, including minimizing the line width of semiconductor production equipment (5 nm or smaller), and by responding to carbon neutral and saving energy to keep pace with the development of increasingly difficult-to-cut materials.
Mitsubishi Materials fully exercise company-wide synergy and use our world-wide networks for crucial business growth of equipment manufacturers and parts processing companies, focusing on speed and innovation.