Category Archives: Materials and Equipment

March 1, 2012 – PRNewswire — Air Products (NYSE:APD) will acquire all of DuPont’s interest in DuPont Air Products NanoMaterials LLC (DA NanoMaterials), a 50-50 joint venture (JV) that the companies set up for the semiconductor and wafer polishing industries. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

DA NanoMaterials, formed in 2001, manufactures chemical mechanical planarization/polishing (CMP) slurries for the semiconductor and wafer polishing, with a portfolio of colloidal silica-based products for copper CMP, tungsten CMP and wafer polishing applications. It operates applications and formulation laboratories in Tempe, AZ and Taiwan.

Also read: The rule of three for CMP by Michael A. Fury, Techcet Group

With 100% ownership of DA NanoMaterials, Air Products will be able to scale up its electronics materials business, and develop "synergies" between products in the division, said Wayne Mitchell, vice president and general manager of Electronics for Air Products. Air Products (NYSE:APD) provides atmospheric, process and specialty gases; performance materials; equipment; and technology.

For more information, visit www.nanoslurry.com or www.airproducts.com.  

DuPont (NYSE: DD) is a global science and engineering company. For additional information about DuPont, visit http://www.dupont.com.

March 1, 2012 – Marketwire — Semiconductor test equipment supplier Verigy, an Advantest Group company (TSE: 6857, NYSE:ATE), installed multiple V93000 Smart Scale and Pin Scale Generation testers with Pin Scale digital channel cards at ISE Labs’ test and packaging facilities in CA and TX.

ISE Labs has a long history with Verigy tools. Its Austin, TX facility will begin using Verigy’s Pin Scale technology to develop advanced test methodologies for the latest generation of low-power ARM-based server processors with high-speed DDR3 memories, PCI Express interfaces and consumer ICs such as smart media system-on-chip (SOC) devices for next-generation media gateways and set-top boxes. The lab will run a V93000 Pin Scale Generation system with an L-Class test head, delivering more than 900 pins, based on Verigy’s Pin Scale 400 and Pin Scale 800 cards.

ISE Labs’ Fremont, CA semiconductor testing laboratory installed two V93000 Smart Scale Generation testers with Pin Scale 1600 cards for use in production-volume IC testing. One V93000 has a C-Class test head with over 1,000 pins using Pin Scale 1600 and Pin Scale 9G cards and the other unit is equipped with Verigy’s smallest A-Class test head, populated with 512 pins, and a MB-AV8 PLUS analog card. The systems also are upgradeable to provide increased pin counts or to add new measurement resources such as Verigy’s Port Scale RF solution.

These installations mark the first application of the company’s Smart Scale technology by a test-services provider in Silicon Valley. ISE Labs will use them for technology development and commercial testing services, noted Sanjeev Mohan, VP of North America sales and support at Verigy. The scalable test systems and pin cards target cost-efficient testing of advanced semiconductor designs, including 3D device architectures and 28nm technology node and smaller ICs.

The Pin Scale 1600 card opens a new dimension in test flexibility. With this card’s universal per-pin architecture, each channel is able to perform any function needed by the device under test, providing maximum flexibility. Per-pin capabilities such as individual clock domain, high accuracy DC and industry-leading digital performance are expanded with the Pin Scale 1600.

Verigy’s Pin Scale 9G card is the only fully integrated, high-speed, digital instrument covering the entire range from DC to more than 8 gigabits per second, making at-speed test affordable. The highly versatile Pin Scale 9G can test any combination of parallel or serial, single-ended or differential, and uni- or bi-directional interfaces.

The MB-AV8 PLUS analog card expands real-time analog bandwidth to cover emerging applications such as LTE Advanced for 4G wireless communications. It provides high throughput while maintaining compatibility with established MB-AV8 instruments.

ISE Labs, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Advanced Semiconductor Engineering, Inc., is an independent provider of semiconductor packaging and testing services. For more information, visit www.iselabs.com.

Verigy provides advanced semiconductor test systems and solutions used by leading companies worldwide in design validation, characterization, and high-volume manufacturing test. Additional information about Verigy, an Advantest Group company, can be found at www.verigy.com. Information about Advantest can be found at www.advantest.com.

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In this 2-part series, Part 1 describes aluminum nitride (AlN) and what it accomplishes as a ceramic substrate for high-brightness light emitting diodes (HB-LEDs). Part 2 provides analysis of the impact of this new technology on sintering throughput.

February 24, 2012 — HB-LED packaging requirements push the materials envelope for low cost and high thermal performance. As manufacturers look to shrink LED size, the substrate is required to dissipate more heat. The commercial imperative to decrease the $/Watt figure of merit for light output is also increasing interest in low-cost substrates.

HB-LED devices are bonded to a ceramic tile, comprising a ceramic substrate metallized with thick-plated copper (Cu), with Cu-filled via interconnections to the printed circuit board (PCB). Heat conduction from the active device occurs through both the Cu vias and the ceramic. The ceramic material provides electrical isolation between the different polarity inputs that drive the LED.

Traditionally, 96% Al2O3 is used as the ceramic substrate in HB-LED applications because of its low cost and good mechanical stability. However, with a thermal conductivity of only 20W/m-K, alumina does not contribute significantly to heat transport in the tiles. This brings in the opportunity for using other ceramic materials with higher thermal performance such as AlN or Si3N4. Both of these alternatives cost more than alumina.

Aluminum Nitride

Aluminum nitride (AlN) is a polycrystalline, high melting temperature (refractory), ceramic material with an advantageous set of properties for die-level packaging of HB-LEDs and power semiconductors: good electrical insulation, high thermal conductivity, high flexural strength, stable in high temperatures, and ease of fabrication (laser drilled, metallized, plated and brazed).

Table 1. AlN properties.

Properties

Value

Comments

Thermal Conductivity

170 W/m-K

Laser Flash

Flexural Strength

325 MPa

Four Point Bend Test

Volume Resistivity

1014 Ohm-cm

Four Point Probe

Metallization Systems

Thin Film, DBC

Thin Film, DBC

 

As power densities of semiconductor devices increase, the need for thermal dissipation from packaging, particularly for temperature-sensitive devices such as LEDs. AlN has a thermal conductivity that is 8-9x higher than competitive materials such as Al2O3. It offers an excellent answer to increasing thermal demands on first-level packaging materials.

Also read: LED packaging report reveals costs, reliability impact of package

Applications with high and increasing thermal demand include: radio frequency (RF) power components for cellular infrastructure, HB-LED, power semiconductors for motor control, packaging for concentrated photovoltaic (CPV) installations, and packaging for semiconductor lasers used in telecommunications.

AlN ceramic substrates are typically made 15 to 60 mils thick, and up to 4.5” square (larger for some specialized applications). These substrates are fabricated using conventional ceramic processing technology.

Table 2. A typical fabrication sequence.

Fabrication Step

Processing Method

Equipment and Comments

Form a slurry with ceramic powder, sintering aids and organic binders

Slurry mixing and milling

Non-aqueous Solvents

Form a thin sheet

Tape casting

Non-aqueous tape caster

Cut out non-fired substrates

Blanking

Press which cuts tape

Press to a controlled density

Iso static lamination

Produces uniform density

Burn out the binder

Binder removal furnace

Continuous thick film furnace in air. Removes binder so only ceramic powder and sintering aids are left in sheet.

High temperature densification

Sinter at temperatures above 1800C to full density

High Temperature, high cost, Tungsten or graphite batch furnace

Flatten dense substrates

Fire in stack with weight at high temperature (near 1800C)

High Temperature, high cost, Tungsten or graphite batch furnace

 

AlN has a range of beneficial properties for high-thermal-demand applications. However, the cost of AlN has limited its utilization. Typically, AlN costs 5-7x more than lower-performance alumina on a cost/square inch basis.

Key contributors to this higher cost structure:

  • Currently available AlN powder is approximately 20x more expensive than alumina powder of comparable quality (purity, particle size).
  • AlN tape must be fired in a non-oxidizing atmosphere. This means that binder removal, which is typically done through oxidation, must be done in a separate furnacing step (at a temperature well below the sintering temperature). A thick film continuous furnace can be used. For alumina, binder removal can be accomplished in the sintering furnace in one furnace step.
  • AlN is sintered in a batch furnace with much lower throughput than continuous furnaces used for alumina. In addition, these batch furnaces are constructed using Mo and W metal heat shields and heating elements  because of the extremely high sintering temperatures (>1800C), so the overall furnace cost is very high.
  • AlN can also be sintered in graphite batch furnaces. Though lower capital cost than W furnaces, the sintering fixtures for this type of furnace are very high cost and the throughput is still low due to batch processing. Also, the interaction of AlN with the carbon containing atmosphere is a graphite furnace must be limited to produce high quality product.
  • The considerations of furnace cost and low throughput for sintering are also a factor for flat fire, so there is essentially a “double hit” for using batch processing.
  • Alumina can be processed in an aqueous environment. This makes the tape fabrication less expensive than the AlN process which must utilize non-aqueous solvents. This is a significant factor for tape casting.

HB-LED-grade AlN

CMC Laboratories Inc. developed a new material that addresses the lower-throughput batch sintering of AlN, higher-cost graphite batch sintering fixtures, and “double” firing costs. This new technology allows AlN to be sintered at lower temperatures in a continuous furnace very similar to furnaces used for alumina.

Table 2. Key properties for the low-temperature-sintered, lower-cost HB-LED Grade AlN compared to the standard, high temperature sintered, higher cost AlN material that is currently commercially available.

Properties

Current AlN

HBLED Grade

Thermal Conductivity

170-190 W/m-K

110-130 W/m-K

Flexural Strength

325 MPa

300 – 325 MPa

Volume Resistivity

1014 Ohm-cm

1014 Ohm-cm

Metallization Systems

Thin Film, DBC

Thin Film, DBC

 

All of the properties are very similar, except that the thermal conductivity of the HB-LED grade material is about 24% lower than the high-cost AlN, but still 6+ times higher than alumina. This makes the HBLED grade material suitable for all but the highest thermal demand applications for AlN.

HBLED grade AlN is made with the same basic processing steps outlined in Table 2 that are used for the high-temperature material. The key difference is the sintering additives that allow the material to densify at 1675°-1690°C as compared to the conventional 1820°-1835°C. Tape binder formulations, tape casting conditions, and the binder burn out process are also the same as, or very similar, to conventional AlN material.

Figure 1 shows a 4.5” x 4.5” x 20 mils substrate made from HBLED grade material that was fired at 1690°C in a nitrogen gas atmosphere with a hold time at sintering temperature of 3 hours.

Figure 1. Low-temperature sintered AlN substrate.

Sintering aids for AlN ceramics form a liquid phase at the sintering temperature that increases the rate of densification and they getter oxygen from the AlN grains during sintering. Since the oxygen content of the AlN grains controls AlN’s thermal conductivity, effective oxygen gettering is key to achieving the highest possible thermal performance. A plot of thermal resistivity vs. oxygen content is shown in Figure 2 [1].

Typical sintering aids for AlN are rare earth oxides with a large chemical driving force for reaction with oxygen in the AlN grains. For the conventional high temperature system, Y2O3 is added to the AlN. At high temperatures during sintering, the added Y2O3 reacts with oxygen from the AlN grains in the form of Al2O3 to form various Y-Al-O phases. The Y2O3– Al2O3 pseudo-binary phase diagram, which is key to understanding the conventional high temperature sintering process for AlN, is shown in Figure 3 [2]. As is evident from the phase diagram, there is a eutectic in the Y2O3– Al2O3 system at 20% Al2O3 which melts at 1780°C. This is the initial liquid phase that promotes sintering. This liquid phase reacts with the added Y2O3 to form more yttria-rich Y-Al-O compounds, which in turn reacts with oxygen from the AlN grains. This reaction shifts the composition toward more Al2O3 rich compositions as oxygen is gettered from the grains. For conventional high temperature sintered AlN, the final second phase composition after the sintering process is complete is composed of YAP (Al2O3:Y2O3), YAM (2Y2O3:Al2O3) or a combination of YAP and YAM.

Figure 2. Oxygen vs. thermal resistivity of AlN.

To summarize, there are two reasons for the high sintering temperature. First, the temperature must be high enough to melt the additive phase to form a liquid which enhances the rate of sintering by orders or magnitude. Second, the temperature must be high enough so that oxygen can diffuse out of the AlN grains during sintering to enhance the thermal conductivity of the AlN ceramic.

There is a third critical requirement for the additive phase during AlN sintering. While a liquid, the Y-Al-O phase will completely surround each AlN grain. If we define a wetting angle between the AlN and Y-Al-O measured at the 3 grain junctions, the microstructure has a very low wetting angle that is less than 60°C. This type of microstructure is shown in the SEM micrograph in Figure 4A. The dark grains in this figure, which are about 10µm large, are the AlN. The bright phase is the Y-Al-O.

Figure 3. Y2O3– Al2O3 pseudo-binary phase diagram.

 

There are two critical performance issues with a wetted microstructure. First, because AlN fracture is inter-granular, the presence of a Y-Al-O phase between the grains lowers the tensile strength of the ceramic by a large factor. The second problem is that a wetted microstructure results in Y-Al-O covering large portions of the surface of the substrate. This reduces the consistency of AlN metallization processes.

Figure 4A. Wetted microstructure- High-temperature AlN.
Figure 4B. De-wetted microstructure- High-temperature AlN.

 

A key requirement for the oxide second phase during AlN sintering is that the oxide phase de-wet the ceramic grains during the later stages of the sintering process so that the final microstructure will have a de-wetted Y-Al-O phase as shown in the micrograph in Figure 4B.

Figure 5. Microstructure sintered at 1675C (and zoom on a particular spot).

These same basic considerations for sintering of high temperature, conventional AlN are relevant to designing a low temperature sintering process:

  • The sintering additive must melt at the sintering temperature to facilitate liquid phase sintering kinetics.
  • The temperature must be high enough for oxygen to diffuse out of the AlN grains during sintering. This consideration puts somewhat of a lower limit on how low AlN can be sintered to produce high thermal conductivity.
  • The liquid phase must de-wet from the AlN grains after densification to form a de-wetted microstructure and thus high flexural strength.
  • This de-wetting is also required to produce ceramic with high electrical resistivity

Figure 5 shows the microstructure of a low temperature formulation that was fired at 1675°C. This has a modified sintering additive package that will melt at much lower temperature than the conventional Y-Al-O additives, but still has a strong chemical driving force to getter oxygen from the AlN grains.

As in the previous micrographs, the dark grey areas are the AlN ceramic grains, about 3-5µm in size, and the bright areas are the oxide sintering additive phase. The difference in color between the micrographs in Figure 4 and Figure 5 are due to imaging conditions, not material differences.

In Part 2 here, the furnace considerations are discussed, as well as furnace throughput. It covers the role of the oxide sintering phase in AlN in defining the materials microstructure and thus determining key properties such as thermal conductivity and mechanical strength.

Jonathan Harris, PhD is president of CMC Laboratories Inc., www.cmclaboratories.com.

References:

[1] J.H. Harris, R.A. Youngman and R.G. Teller, J. Mater. Res. 5, 1763 (1990)

[2] J. McCauley, and N. Corbin, High Temperature Reactions and Microstructures in the Al2O3-AlN System, Progress in Nitrogen Ceramics, ed. F.L. Rley, Martinus Nijhoff Pub., The Netherlands, 111- 118 © 1983.

February 24, 2012 — With thermal issues accounting for half of all lighting failures, and costs too high for widespread adoption, assembly and packaging are keys to improving light emitting diodes (LEDs). In "High Brightness LED Assembly Trends, Materials and Issues," consulting firm TechSearch International tracks LED packaging materials and methods, as well as reliability and package efficiency. The report reviews high-brightness LED assembly trends and issues, materials used today, and requirements for the future. Critical issues, including thermal and optical, are addressed.

Packaging materials significantly affect the optical efficiency of LEDs. Reflectivity, transmissivity, and index of refraction can affect the lumens output. Thermal issues account for as much as 50% of the failures in lighting. Packaging material stability (encapsulants and lenses) is also affected by exposure to elevated temperatures, UV, and other wavelength radiation.

There are no standard LED packages. The variety of materials selected, packaging methods, and ultimately reliability make cost-reduction a complex decision-making process.

In the report, TechSearch International shares examples of various packages for high-brightness LEDs to illustrate the diversity in package options.

TechSearch International

February 23, 2012 — Wafer-level packaging tool maker NEXX Systems was awarded a $42,765 Workforce Training Fund grant from the state of Massachusetts, where NEXX Systems is headquartered. The grant will help provide training and professional development for more than 100 employees there, improving lean manufacturing techniques and adding to their skill sets.

NEXX will focus trainings on leadership, encouraging employees to enhance their skills, improve individual performance and increase overall productivity. Another major effort will go into continuous process improvement training, with practices based on 6 Sigma, lean manufacturing and the Five S’s. NEXX manufactures its semiconductor packaging equipment in the US, with emphasis on high performance tools for packaging lines and development work.

The Workforce Training Fund works with Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick and Lieutenant Governor Timothy Murray, training over 85,000 Massachusetts employees since 2007. "With this training, companies create greater efficiencies in doing business, leading to more opportunities for jobs, increases in work capacity and business growth," said Murray.

NEXX Systems provides flip chip and advanced packaging equipment. Learn more at http://www.nexxsystems.com/.

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February 22, 2012 — MCLR’s factory in Vladimir, Russia, will manufacture substrates and panels for light-emitting diodes (LEDs) requiring thermal management, as well as other electronic devices such as 3D ICs and micro electro mechanical systems (MEMS). The new plant is a collaboration between state-held RUSNANO and Micro Components Ltd. (MCL), an Israeli high-tech company, with direct input from Tamir Fishman CIG, a venture capital fund created by Russian Venture Company.

Total budget for the project is 868 million rubles. Of that sum, RUSNANO is cofinancing 120 million rubles. The substrate manufacturing project went from initial financing to commercial production in 14 months.

In phase 1, the Vladimir MCLR factory will produce 10,000 panels/month, which can be manufactured into more than 1 million LED lamps. By 2015, MCLR expects the factory to run at its 70,000 panels/month capacity. The venture plans to earn 2.8 million rubles annually by this time, with 72% of that from substrates for assembly of electronic devices and 28% from LED module substrates.

The project is based on MCL’s proprietary ALOX substrate technology, with an aluminum or copper conducting layer and a dielectric material with nanopourous structure. ALOX technology lowers the temperature of the LED crystal with rapid heat sink, using selectively staged aluminum oxidation in which dielectric material is obtained on the surface of the metal and in its depths. Drilling and plating of perforations are not required with ALOX because the interconnections are made entirely of aluminum and the dielectric material is made of high-quality ceramic.

ALOX-built substrates demonstrate good thermal reliability, with improved heat conductivity, cost (20-30% below), and reliability (2x) over traditional products. The product can also be recycled, unlike glass textolite materials. ALOX can be used to package microwave electronics, system-in-package (SiP) devices, 3D memory chip stacks, MEMS devices, and power semiconductor modules and components.

MCLR reports that leading international players in the LED market are considering the nanostructured substrates.

Yan Ryazantsev, director of the Investment and Expertise Department and member of the Executive Committee, Russian Venture Company, called MCLR an example of successfully importing "the latest foreign technology" to establish "large-scale commercial manufacturing in Russia," with products that can be sold internationally. Also read: RUSNANO, Japan tighten nano ties

RUSNANO was founded in March 2011, through reorganization of state corporation Russian Corporation of Nanotechnologies, to develop the Russian nanotechnology industry. The Government of the Russian Federation owns 100% of the shares in RUSNANO. Russian Venture Company is a state fund of funds, an institute for development of the Russian Federation, and one of the government’s key instruments in its effort to build a national innovation system.

Visit the new LEDs Manufacturing Channel on ElectroIQ.com!

February 21, 2012 — Electronics System Integration Technology Conference (ESTC) 2012 seeks original papers describing research in all areas of electronic packaging, including LED packaging, flexible electronics, assembly and interconnect technologies, and more. ESTC takes place September 17-20 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Organized by IEEE-CPMT since 2006, in association with IMAPS-Europe, the ESTC conference series focuses on interconnect and packaging technologies for electronic system integration. Submit your abstract by April 1.
 
Paper abstracts may be submitted to the following tracks and application areas:

  • Assembly and Manufacturing Technology
  • Materials for Interconnect and Packaging
  • Reliability
  • Embedded Die and Wafer Level Packaging
  • 3D Integration Technology
  • Microsystem Packaging
  • Flexible and Stretchable electronics
  • Advanced and Emerging Technologies
  • Power Electronic Packaging
  • Optoelectronic Packaging
  • Thermal and Mechanical Modeling
  • Electrical Design & Modeling
  • Consumer Electronics
  • Automotive and Industrial Electronics
  • Avionics and Space Electronics
  • Medical Electronics
  • Solid State Lighting
  • Telecom System Electronics
  • Wireless Electronics
  • RF-ID and Smartcards
  • Display and Imager Electronics
  • Energy System Electronics

Submit a 300-500 word abstract that describes the scope, content and key points of your proposed paper. Abstracts must include results and graphics. Please visit www.estc2012.eu to upload your abstract. Submissions for poster presentations are also welcome. Submission deadline for abstracts is April 1, 2012.

ESTC will select the best paper and best poster presentations. For each, the author(s) will receive a personalized ESTC award and a monetary prize from the IEEE-CPMT Region 8 Director.

The official language of all presentations is English. All oral and poster presentation authors are invited to prepare a paper for the conference proceeding which will also be included in the IEEE XPLORE database after the conference.
 
Your submission must include the mailing address, business telephone number and email address of the presenting author and affiliations of all authors. All submitted abstracts will be reviewed by the committee to ensure a high-quality conference. At the discretion of the program committee, paper abstracts submitted may be considered for poster presentation. The work should be original and not previously published, and avoid inclusion of commercial content. Additional instructions about formatting the paper will be published on www.estc2012.eu.

Selected presenters will be notified on June 1, 2012. Final paper manuscript will then be due August 15, 2012.

Related story: Advanced packaging at the 2010 ESTC

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February 17, 2012 — The International Electronics Manufacturing Initiative (iNEMI) will hold the industry kick-off for its 2013 Roadmap in an open workshop immediately following IPC APEX EXPO in San Diego, CA, March 1-2.

Also read: 2011 ITRS: DRAM, 3D Flash, MEMS, nano scaling steal the show

The day-and-a-half workshop will begin with a review of the product sector key attribute spreadsheets, followed by break-out meetings of the technology groups as they begin the process of identifying technology and infrastructure needs for the electronics manufacturing supply chain. Packaging attendees will be interested in the Packaging & Component Substrates chapter of the roadmap especially.

Membership is not required to participate in the roadmap; non-member participation is encouraged to ensure a broad and accurate perspective of the supply chain.

The iNemi roadmap highlights processes and capabilities that will be needed for future products, including disruptive and emerging technologies. Every 2 years, the Roadmap is mapped out to identify key gaps in technology and infrastructure, R&D needs, and other activities needed for advanced electronics supply chains.

Check out the 2011 Roadmap: MEMS, 3D packaging major factors in iNEMI roadmap

Efforts are organized into Product Emulator Groups (PEGs) and Technology Working Groups  (TWGs).  The PEGs, each chaired by a major OEM in the specific sector covered, define the future technology needs of

February 17, 2012 — Shin-Etsu Chemical Co. Ltd.’s new KER-7000 Series silicone encapsulating materials offer a low (1.38) refractive index (RI) for high-brightness light-emitting diode (HB-LED) packaging with lower gas permeability.

Shin-Etsu Chemical’s silicone encapsulating materials include a methyl-group material for improved heat resistance and phenyl-group material that is characterized by low gas permeability.

The encapsulant targets low gas permeability, good photo-thermal stability in withstanding high temperatures, and optical transparency over the LED lifetime. The new materialset reduces gas permeability by 1/10, Shin-Etsu reports, to prevent oxidation that leads to light-intensity degradation. The highly transparent encapsulant suits flat-package HB-LEDs.

KER-7000 materials’ heat resistance is at the same level as that of the methyl-group. When compared with the phenyl group, the new product has the same level of gas permeability and much higher resistance to high temperatures.

The series includes 2 hardness-level products: KER-7080 A/B has a hardness level of (Durometer A) 80, and KER-7030 A/B has a hardness level of (Durometer A) 30.

The company is beginning sample shipments, mainly for applications in LED lighting.

Shin-Etsu Chemical, in addition to encapsulating materials, develops heat-radiating die-bond materials, lens materials, reflector materials and moisture-proof insulating materials for HB-LEDs. Learn more at www.shinetsu.co.jp.

Visit the new LEDs Manufacturing Channel on ElectroIQ.com!

February 15, 2012 — Finetech will donate a high-accuracy die bonder in a drawing this summer that is open to U.S. and Canadian qualified universities and colleges.

The multi-application FINEPLACER Pico MA bonder with 5