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[News] New Battleground for TSMC, Samsung & Intel in Panel-Level Packaging


2024-06-21 Semiconductors editor

According to a previous report from Nikkei citing sources, TSMC is rumored to be entering the fan-out panel-level packaging sector. As cited in a report from UDN, Intel and Samsung have also announced plans to invest in this area. With TSMC, the leading wafer foundry, joining the fray, the three semiconductor giants are set to compete in fan-out panel-level packaging.

TSMC stated yesterday that the company is closely monitoring the progress and development of advanced packaging technologies, including panel-level packaging technology.

Nikkei reported that in response to future AI demand trends, TSMC is collaborating with equipment and material suppliers to develop new advanced chip packaging technology. This technology uses a rectangular substrate for packaging, replacing the current traditional circular wafer, to accommodate more chipsets on a single wafer. The report further mentioned that TSMC’s research is still in its early stages and might take several years to commercialize, but it represents a significant technological shift.

Reportedly, TSMC previously considered the challenge of using rectangular substrates to be too high, requiring substantial time and effort from both the company and its suppliers, along with upgrades or replacements of many production tools and materials.

Nikkei  also mentioned that TSMC is currently experimenting with rectangular substrates measuring 515 mm in length and 510 mm in width, providing more than three times the usable area of a 12-inch wafer.

TSMC is expanding its advanced chip packaging capacity, with the expansion of the Taichung plant mainly for NVIDIA, while the Tainan plant is primarily for Amazon and its chip design partner Alchip Technologies.

TSMC’s CoWoS advanced chip packaging can combine two sets of NVIDIA Blackwell GPU chips and eight sets of high-bandwidth memory (HBM). As single chips need to accommodate more transistors and integrate more memory, the mainstream 12-inch wafer might not be sufficient for packaging advanced chips in two years.

Samsung and Intel have also recognized the aforementioned issues and are investing in next-generation advanced packaging technologies.

Samsung currently offers advanced packaging services such as I-Cube 2.5D packaging, X-Cube 3D IC packaging, and 2D FOPKG packaging. For applications requiring low-power memory integration, such as mobile phones or wearable devices, Samsung already provides platforms like fan-out panel-level packaging and fan-out wafer-level packaging.

Intel is planning to launch the industry’s first glass substrate solution for next-generation advanced packaging, with mass production scheduled between 2026 and 2030. Intel anticipates that data centers, AI, and graphics processing—markets that require larger volume packaging and higher-speed applications and workloads—will be the first to adopt this technology.

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(Photo credit: Intel)

Please note that this article cites information from Nikkei and UDN.

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