Fab of the future: Velocity with smart manufacturing
October 8, 2021
October 8, 2021
With the rapid pace of technology innovation, it’s no surprise that today’s fabs are continuously adapting, innovating, and transforming. They see huge opportunities to leverage and advance the latest emerging high-growth areas of Enhanced Reality, Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Automotive, and 5G. At the same time, they still need to keep pace with the conventional growth in demand as computing becomes pervasive in all aspects of day-to-day life.
Fabs should embrace digital technologies across the supply chain ecosystem to become a truly digitally connected and digital-led smart fab.
To realize full potential, fabs and ecosystems, must evolve from conventional structures to modern technologies. Doing this means taking aim at certain areas across fabs and ecosystems that face major challenges. We have identified 7 pivotal focus areas to consider:
Fabs need to find the right people with the right expertise or equip existing talent with the skills to handle changing digital technologies.
Chips are requiring more advanced nodes and complex designs, resulting numerous challenges like high costs, slow maturity and high turnaround times.
Deploying new technologies into production takes time and smaller chip sizes can increase challenges due to limitations in Moore’s Law.
Industries require reliable chips but traditional checks can be ineffective in detecting defects, making quality ripe for advanced digital tools.
Chip shortages have extended lead times and made sourcing materials complex, resulting in supply chain disruptions a priority for manufacturing.
Multiple integration technology packages pose a challenge for traditional design tools forcing design teams to verify and optimize their system.
Semi manufacturing is responsible for major water consumption and chemical emissions. Smart fabs can track power, emissions and water usage.
This digital framework example points out a few approaches that can be applied to optimize end-to-end value chain across the build, operate and maintain phases. An overarching Manufacturing Collaboration Tower can enable fabs to open new business value.
The destination to become a fab of the future may require driving toward 3 key imperatives. One of the most critical is Digital Manufacturing Analytics which is an integral capability into all digital solutions to help drive actionable insights and sets the stage for the other imperatives. Another vital imperative is a Manufacturing Collaboration Tower to actively monitor and control end-to-end internal manufacturing operations.
These imperatives along with several others enable smart fabs that apply solutions can set a vision for the future.