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Micron doubling fab capacity for CMOS
sensors
Yoshiko Hara
(05/23/2006 2:53 PM EDT)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=188101706
Tokyo — Micron Technology Inc.
intends to double its CMOS sensor
manufacturing capacity by converting two memory fabs
to image chip production.
"We are filling up depreciated 8-inch wafer lines with CMOS
sensors,” said Hisayuki Suzuki, senior director of
marketing for Micron's Imaging Group. The fab
conversions make sense, Suzuki said, since “memories are now produced on
advanced, 90-nm or 65-nm processes, but sensors are using the 130-nm process at
present and are about to migrate to 110 nm.”
Micron, which currently produces CMOS
sensors in Boise, Idaho,
and Avezzano, Italy,
is converting another Boise plant
and one in Nishiwaki,
Japan, to sensor
production. Each of the four fabs has a production
capacity of 50,000 8-inch wafers a month.
The Japanese fab will begin test production this
month. "Micron can produce CMOS sensors
anywhere in the world, but we expect that production at the Nishiwaki
fab will bring better service for customers in Japan,"
said Suzuki.
The production expansion is based on Micron's bullish expectations for CMOS
sensor market growth. The company predicts the market will expand from 800
million units this year to 1 billion in 2007 and 1.7 billion in 2010. It claims
its shipments have accounted for 36 percent of the total volume shipped this
year to date.
Micron has been focusing on camera phone sensors and claims to have
accounted for 33 percent of the total market for those devices in 2005. Now the
company is bidding for higher presence in the sensor market for digital still
cameras.
Micron recently announced an 8-Mpixel
imager in the 1/2.5-inch optical format—an approach favored for use in
digital cameras—that was achieved by scaling down the pixel pitch to 1.75
micron. The company intends to promote the device as its mainstream product
next year. It also reported the development of a 1.4-micron-pixel-pitch sensor
prototype.
"CCD sensors achieved a 1.8-micron pixel pitch this year,” Suzuki said,
so “in terms of technology, the CMOS sensor
has surpassed the CCD sensor. CMOS sensors
now can offer higher performance, with low cost and ample applications.”