One
familiar entity seems to have gone a long way toward achieving Schmitz's
goals well before 2009—Advanced Micro Devices. The company recently
announced its "smooth transition to 90-nm manufacturing" and revenue
shipments of low-power, silicon-on-insulator (SOI)-based Athlon 64 processors
for notebook computers from Fab 30 in Dresden. One of the keys to this
successful 90-nm ramp, AMD says, is its proprietary Automated Precision
Manufacturing (APM) capability.
APM
is much more than your father's fab automation, where robot arms schlepp
wafers in and out of process chambers, guided vehicles trundle between
tool bays along elevated monorails or guide rails on the production
floor, and stockers brim with queued-up WIP. In fact, materials-handling
systems play a relatively small part in the scheme.
"In
these highly automated fabs, the ability to automate the decision-making
process is much more important than the ability to just automate the
material movement processes," explains AMD's director of APM, Thomas
Sonderman. Version 2.0 of APM's sophisticated control algorithms connect
APC, yield management systems, integrated production scheduling, tool
performance optimization, and product performance targeting, thus "linking
the entire fabrication process together and treating it holistically,"
according to Sonderman. "We control every lot in the fab even though
we don't measure every lot."
Citing
specific examples with etch, rapid thermal annealing, and copper plating
equipment, Sonderman says that APM's "very tightly controlled manufacturing
environment" allows fab workers to "see things that are interacting
. . . to drill down to something actually going on in a tool. This is
one of the things that we believe not only allowed us to rapidly increase
and actually get to high yields as we introduced a technology, but also
to not get lost in the world of interactions that is causing a lot of
people pain at 90 nm."
Sonderman
says that development of APM version 3.0 is on schedule to roll out
in conjunction with the ramp of 65-nm processes at AMD Fab 36, the company's
first 300-mm facility, now under construction in Dresden. What does
he see as APM's biggest challenge? "Integrating the MES (manufacturing
execution system) into 3.0 and then adding capabilities to internally
developed products, such as recipe management and statistical process
control . . . and also integrating third-party yield management systems
(YMS) and production scheduling software . . . with our internal stuff."
He
lauds the integration testing going on at AMD's automation labs in Austin
and Dresden. "We feel good to drive the roadmap on full wafer-level
control, comprehensive adaptive sampling, and fully integrated fault
detection and run-to-run infrastructure, [as well as] a much more die-level-control-based
architecture for YMS." Sonderman points out that such extremely dialed-in
levels of control become even more important with the integration of
strained SOI, metal gates and other advanced transistor materials, and
ever-more-complex process interactions.
There's
certainly room for skepticism about AMD's robust claims. The word "profits"
doesn't appear very often in the company's historical financial reports.
Whether you buy into the hype or not, the company seems to be trying
to profoundly change the way chips are made.
Tom Cheyney
Editor
tom.cheyney@cancom.com