Online information source for semiconductor professionals

Chip Shots

The Chip Shots blog channels the observations of Fabtech's and PV-Tech/Photovoltaic International's Senior Contributing Editor--USA, Tom Cheyney, a 20-year veteran of semiconductor, advanced micro/nanoelectronics, and solar manufacturing trade journalism. For 15 years, Tom was editor in chief of MICRO (the original home of Chip Shots) until it ceased publication in July 2006. Tom calls Los Angeles home.

Oberai discusses Magma’s move into solar PV yield management space

29 August 2008
The semiconductor industry has long had its eye on improving yields in the fabs, developing an ever-more sophisticated array of software and hardware tools to detect defects and faults, monitor and analyze process and design variations, zero in on the root causes, and crunch the giga-reams of resultant data to try and make sense of the perturbations of the production flows. As the solar photovoltaics manufacturing industry ramps up and seeks ways to improve its own best practices on the factory floor while reducing costs, the need for a comprehensive, PV-specific yield enhancement strategy has become more acute. One company familiar to the design and yield communities in the chipmaking realm, Magma Design Automation, announced earlier this week that it is developing a new solar-specific software system based on its proven YieldManager platform. Read more >>

Solar start-up Suniva sees plenty of efficiency, cost innovations left in crystalline silicon PV

21 August 2008
Spun out of the Georgia Institute of Technology's Center of Excellence in Photovoltaics (UCEP) last year, Suniva has emerged as one of the most intriguing start-ups in the solar PV space. Over the past six months, the Atlanta-based company has raised $50 million in Series B funds; started to build, outfit, and ramp its first solar-cell production line; and struck big-ticket, nine-figure, multiyear deals with its supply chain (REC for wafers) and customer base (Solon for modules). Suniva's goal is not to bring yet another "disruptive" thin-film or concentrator PV technology to market, but to harness the high-efficiency, low-cost potential of solar's workhorse starting material--crystalline silicon. Read more >>

While First Solar keeps on trucking, others in CdTe thin-film PV pack keep on muddling

21 August 2008
How does that additional 72 MW of cadmium-telluride thin-film PV module-making capacity planned by First Solar for its Perrysburg, OH, facilities stack up against the rest of the CdTe competition's current production levels? According to recent data compiled by NREL and presented at Intersolar North America/Semicon West, First's extra chunk of factory output would exceed the total megawatt-nameplate of AVA Solar, PrimeStar, Calyxo/Q-Cells, Antec, Avendi, and ASP combined. The same data show the CdTe Gang of Six Followers projected to reach 280 MW by 2010--by which time First will have passed the gigawatt mark. Read more >>

Taking the silicon shipment area numbers, semiconductor sales figures to the woodshed

15 August 2008
The latest numbers from the SIA and SEMI's silicon manufacturers group (SMG) have come out in the past two weeks, so it's time for Chip Shots' quarterly metrification-and-comparison woodshed exercise. Read more >>

VLSI Standards’ Tortonese talks about company’s move into solar PV cell/module calibration

14 August 2008
When the term "traceable calibration standards" gets mentioned, it's not likely to trigger a giddy rush of excitement among most professionals in the semiconductor, flat-panel display, and related micro/nano industries. Read more >>

Solar-charged Kobe: SPI to install PV systems at L.A.’s Staples Center, Nokia Theatre

13 August 2008
By the time the Los Angeles Lakers have their grudge match with the reigning NBA champion Boston Celtics on Christmas Day 2008, the home team's Staples Center venue should be getting a burst of power from a fresh batch of 1727 Solar Power, Inc. (SPI) modules on its very SoCal "surfboard"-shaped roof. Read more >>

SI’s Lammers does nice blog on semi tool/materials M&A, but what about his own employer’s status?

12 August 2008
Although David Lammers of Semiconductor International might be better known for his consummate "reportering" skills (with no apologies to George W), he's also a pretty good blogger when he gets around to it.

His latest posting, the snappily headlined "M&A Activity Picks Up in Downturn Dog Days," discusses the wave of mergers and acquisitions' goings-on in the semiconductor equipment and materials space over the past several months. Read more >>

Thin is in: Examining the benefits, challenges of the ultrathin--solar wafer, that is

11 August 2008
You got your thin wafers, your very thin wafers, and soon your ultrathin wafers. Read more >>

Just roll with it: Selected short takes from the flexible electronics, PV realm

07 August 2008
The copy flow has slowed here this week, due to a combination of laptop software problems (thanks, Microsoft Vista!) and a deadline for a print feature in the first edition of Photovoltaics International (if you haven't signed up for a free subscription at pv-tech.org, please do!). Read more >>

Solar-cell simulation gets a dino-sized push from Synopsys’ Sentaurus

04 August 2008
Although its name conjurs connections with the dinosaur realm, fallen Roman (or Romulan) Empire heroes, or fabled half-human/half-horse creatures, Synopsys' Sentaurus has more in common with virtual reality than paleontology, ancient history, or Greek mythology. Read more >>