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Editorial: Goodbye '03 Hello '04
 
... With the exception of the blue spectrum LED sector, and the handful of key defense contractors and their subs who are directly profiting from the current USA administration's ongoing "war," I doubt anybody working in advanced semiconductors is going to feel badly about saying "good-bye" to the year 2003....
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Fujitsu and SEI Form High Speed Joint Venture

December 28, 2003...As announced on Dec. 25th, Fujitsu Limited and Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd. (SEI) entered into an agreement to create a joint venture that will consolidate the operations of Fujitsu Quantum Devices Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Fujitsu that is focused on the development, manufacture and sales of compound semiconductors, with the electronic devices business of Sumitomo Electric's compound semiconductor operations. According to the joint company news release, Fujitsu and SEI will each have an equal equity ownership in the joint venture. The new company, which is officially yet to be named, will be engaged in everything from development and manufacturing to sales of a wide variety of compound semiconductor devices and is slated to be operational by April 1, 2004. While some Wall Street commentators (ref: Dow Jones article as one example) have already reacted, singling out TriQuint as a target competitor to the new JV, consensus within our knowledgeable community is that this is inaccurate as the aim of the new joint venture is "to quickly establish the trust of customers worldwide as the world's leader in the field by offering a level of technological and developmental expertise unmatched by any company in the industry." The wafer/materials arm of SEI which is a leading supplier of GaAs, InP, and GaN to virtually everyone in the compound semi industry, remains, as it always has been, a separate division of SEI.

NEC Details Progress on HD DVD Development

December 28, 2003...Next generation DVDs are an exciting field for those working on blue spectrum laser diodes, and NEC Corporation, which recently took a major leap forward within the DVD Forum standards arena, has revealed more details on their gameplan for what's called High Definition and High Density DVDs, or "HD DVD" for short. NEC's HD DVD technology is capable of recording and playing back both current DVDs and next generation DVDs with a single optical head. While complete details are in the NEC company news release, of special note is that, to date, challenges have evidently included the need for two optical heads to develop a device that can play/record both current and next generation DVDs. Success in creating a device with a single optical head enables production of smaller and thinner HD DVDs at a lower cost. Through this research NEC has realized a HD DVD device with a single optical head that is the same size as current DVDs but which achieves 4 times the storage capacity of current DVDs. It is expected that this will enable smooth transition from current DVDs to HD DVDs. Expecting that this technology will improve HD DVD significantly, NEC plans to further advance its technology to promote product development. NEC will display the above accomplishments at the International Consumer Electronics Show (2004 International CES) from January 8 to 11, 2004 in Las Vegas, USA, and Ryoichi (Rick) Hayatsu, Chief Manager, 1st Storage Products Division at NEC, who was a very strong speaker at our June Blue 2003 meet in June, has kindly accepted our invitation to speak at the sequel, Blue 2004, in Hsinchu, Taiwan May 10-12, 2004.

Japanese LED Majors Collaborate on Initial Industry Standards

December 28, 2003...While we all recognize that advanced LEDs are a very international business, we report to you that on December 24, 2003 Nichia Corp., Toyoda Gosei Co. Ltd., Matsushita Electric Works Co. Ltd., and other Japanese advanced LED manufacturers, have made it publicly known that they are working with their country's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry to draw up a common set of initial standards for what looks to be called advanced "LED-based lighting equipment," and they intend to make significant progress in 2004. Further, and as reported in a recent Nihon Keizai Shimbun article "by setting common specifications, such as how many LEDs are lined up, and in what manner and interval, the manufacturers will be able to make their lamps interchangeable just as fluorescent lights and light bulbs are." The journal also reported: "By also setting a universal safety standard, the manufacturers are planning to pitch LED-based lamps as a safe, energy-efficient alternative to fluorescent lights." The starting point will be to establish a standardization organization in the spring and once that's done, they intend to invite Toshiba and Matsushita Electric and other major manufacturers of related products to join the standardization process. Our congratulations to Japan's LED leaders and thei Ministry for taking the initiative on this. However, considering the extremely international nature of the HB- and blue spectrum LED industry (collectively known as "Advanced LEDs" as a means of distinguishing them from "conventional LEDs" which have been around for decades... and are made by an established, very rudimentary compound semi epitaxial growth method), we look forward to hearing more about the root IP such "standards" intend to encompass, and to hearing from other international industry catalysts as to how global advanced LED standards might be put in place in a timely manner that compliment these initial activities from Japan's major producers.

Compound Semi Community Sees First Female President/CEO

December 28, 2003...The compound semi community may not have raised Stephanie Burns as one of its own, but we inherited the 48 year old company president of Dow Corning recently when they purchased the Sterling SiC operation from Uniroyal Technology. As of January 1st, Stephanie Burns will add "CEO" to her title of President of Dow Corning. To the best we can ascertain, Stephanie Burns is the first female President/CEO of a company that regards itself now as a key contributor to compound semi technology. As a supplier of SiC wafers, with eyes on expanding their offerings, Dow Corning is already regarded as a full-fledged member of our close-knit international community. FYI... Stephanie Burns is a Ph.D. who joined Dow Corning in 1983 as a researcher, working on water-based and high temperature elastomers. She earned her doctorate in organic chemistry from Iowa State University and completed postdoctoral studies at the University of Organometallic Chemistry Languedoc-Rousillon in France. Stephanie is a member of the American Chemical Society and a member of the Chemical and Engineering News (C&EN) Advisory Board and is on the Board of Directors for Manpower, Inc., and of the Michigan Molecular Institute (MMI). She is also a board member of the American Chemistry Council and is on the Board of Trustees for the Midland Community Center and also supports Catalyst, a worldwide nonprofit organization working to advance women in business and in the professions. Company news release.

Nichia Develops 365nm 100mW Advanced LED

December 28, 2003...We are remiss in reporting that, on Dec. 3rd, Nichia Corp. of Japan, introduced a new 365nm, 100mW line they've dubbed "i-LED" . The peak wavelength of i-line, according to Nichia, makes it the most powerful in the market. For those tracking Nichia closely, we invite you to check the details of this line on Nichia website and to let us know how this compares with progress from Nichia's competitors.

Samsung's SEMCO Beefs GaN Development

December 28, 2003...According to Aixtron AG of Aachen, Germany, which has sold yet another GaN MOCVD system to Samsung Electro Mechanics (SEMCO), which is based in Suwon-City, South Korea, SEMCO is further beefing their ability to produce GaN based materials and devices. This is the the third AIX 2600G3HT large scale production system Aixtron has delivered to SEMCO. According to Dr. JeWon Kim, Manager at SEMCO, "Our first 24x2 inch reactor, the AIX 2600G3HT, which had been installed at our new fab earlier this year has already been proven and qualified as mass production system for our high end UHB-GaN-LED products. With the exceptional uniformities and the unrivaled production yield the AIX 2600G3HT has been clearly evaluated as the future platform for the next phase capacity expansion of our MOCVD facilities.” Company news release

OEpic's Back in the News

December 28, 2003...As those working in the advanced broadband communications sector slowly and cautiously reappear on the news scene, it gives us special pleasure to hear from one of the more promising startups in 10G, OEpic, Inc. of Sunnyvale, California USA. OEpic re-emerges with the announcement of their new 10G optical front-end TOSA/ROSA for low-cost 10G legacy fiber upgrades. The new 1310 nm Legacy-10G TOSA/ROSA product line addresses the need for EDC-compatible optical front-ends for multi-mode fiber applications in existing networks. “Our new TOSA/ROSA optical front-end provides a low-cost solution for upgrading existing 1GBE multi-mode fiber networks to 10G. We are working with the leading EDC chip vendors and have demonstrated greater than 300 meters of error-free transmission over 62.5 micron fiber using our optical front-end parts.” said Dr. Yi-Ching Pao, Founder, President and CEO of OEpic. “As the IEEE 802.3 standards for legacy fiber move forward, we expect OEpic’s new 1310 nm Legacy-10G products to lead to rapid and cost-effective upgrades to 10G.” The LF1030-LCF11 TOSA consists of a 1310 nm Fabry Perot (FP) laser coupled to a single-mode fiber stub, facilitating offset launch into multi-mode fiber. Another version of this module (LF6230-LCF11) utilizes direct coupling to multimode fiber with restricted launch for controlled modal dispersion. The LF1030-LCF11 TOSA and the PT6232-LCF11 ROSA and evaluation boards are now available for sampling and evaluation. The LF6230-LCF11 TOSA will be available in Q1 of 2004. Volume quantities will be available in Q2 of 2004. Details are provided in the Company news release

Maximizing Photonics West

December 28, 2003...Photonics West 2004 is the next big event for a major portion of our industry, and it will be held January 24 through 29 in San Jose, California in the USA. So that those planning on attending this rather far-reaching conclave, we remind you that the meet features four international symposia: BiOS 2004 - Biomedical Optics OPTO 2004 - Integrated Optoelectronic Devices LASE 2004 - Lasers and Applications in Science and Engineering Micromachining and Microfabrication. Note that the IS&T/SPIE-sponsored Electronic Imaging symposium will be held separately this year, from January 18-22, also in San Jose. The meet is slated to attract 13,000 scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs will feature 2,300 technical papers and has booked 700 exhibiting companies, There will also be 80 short courses, workshops, and tutorials and will undoubtedly be the scene of considerable job recruitment efforts on the part of the estimated one million out of work engineers in California as attendance to the exhibits remains a no-charge affair. For those interested in doing their homework, we direct you to what journalists find a helpful start, that being the Hot Topics section of Photonics West website.

New Chinese-American Full Service Manufacturing Company Formed

December 18, 2003...A new optical component company called Photop Technologies, Inc. was recently announced. Comprised of the combination of four merged entities: Koncent, Suwtech, Sandgy, and Microlattice, Photop is projecting itself as a full service supplier to various application sectors addressed by the compound semi industry, with base operations in both Fuzhou, Fujian China and Milpitas, California USA. The combined company will debut as a 1000 employee strong global company at the upcoming Photonics West show in San Jose, California in January.

Initial product offerings and services include: 1. Passive/Active components, devices and modules for fiberoptic communication; 2. Diode pumped solid state green/infrared lasers for laser display, entertainment, pointing and laboratory; 3. high precision optical components and crystals for instruments, fiberoptic communication and lasers and 4. compound semiconductor crystals (GaAs and InP) as substrates for LED, LD and wireless communication components. According to Hongrui Wang, Chairman of the newly formed Phototop, "Koncent, Suwtech, Sandgy and Microlattice are well synergized in products, customer base and capability. In addition to our current high quality and low cost products, we are building a leading photonics manufacturing base for international customers by vertical integration of our resources. As a global manufacturing partner, we are always ready to co-invest production line together with our customers as well as establish dedicated production line for our customers to protect customers' IP." Serving as CEO of the new company is John Ling, and COO is Sunny Sun. Going into the opto arena, Photop brings with it more than 40,000 sq. meters of advanced semi facilities and 300 engineers as part of the 1,000 strong employee base.

Full service contract manufacturing capabilities for OEMs appears to be their initial strength. Complete details as to what they offer and the facilities they have in place, plus their initial rollout strategy are included in the company news release and the company has published a list of upcoming trade show appearances and booth numbers.

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Commentary & Perspective...

Goodbye '03 Hello '04

December 28, 2003...With the exception of the blue spectrum LED sector, and the handful of key defense contractors and their subs who are directly profiting from the current USA administration's ongoing "war," I doubt anybody working in advanced semiconductors is going to feel badly about saying "good-bye" to the year 2003. Those working in broadband communications are especially glad we're closing the books on what will undoubtedly go down in high tech history as the year we finally hit the bottom after the infamous "Bubble" bust, and started the slow turn upward... back where the sun used to shine. Those still not working at all (due to the incredible number of layoffs from downsizing, bankruptcies, or... in the case of the USA especially, continued belt-tightening measures that necessitate outsourcing and more offshore manufacturing) are really glad 2003 is over. Those of us who have been working virtually for free in enterprises we personally have a stake in, and those who have had to make do with shortened work weeks and/or no raises while carrying progressively heavier loads due to skeletal staffs, joyfully put '03 behind us and look forward to some degree of normalcy. Looking forward to '04, but not clearly knowing what it will bring, I'm reminded of the old '60s slogan that again seems the appropriate new mantra: "Onward... thru the fog."

As we learned at the Outlook for 2004 annual industry conference (and as reported in our Dec. 18th issue) consensus among those in the wireless and opto communication sectors is that the worse is, indeed, over. Of course that prompted a flurry of emails asking if that meant could be interpreted that people are starting to hire again. Keep dreaming, and... think about it. The recovery and rebuild (thus the theme of this year's Outlook) will take time, because "The Downturn" was really, really bad this time. So, surviving companies first have to start to pay themselves by repaying a debt to their surviving employees. Then they have to actually reinstate decent budgets to simply get back to doing business in a preferred manner (as opposed to bare-bones). After that, they can start thinking about once again expanding their product lines and customer base, and... maybe, even beef up R&D once again. That's when they'll consider new hires. Maybe... by mid-2004? We can only hope. In the USA, leaders such as Cree, RFMD and TriQuint will likely be in the point position. After as many years as those three have been taking arrows in the back, they're now tough enough and strong enough to safely follow.

Those focused on the blue spectrum seem to be honestly doing quite well. Have those of you still unemployed done your homework on the wide bandgap semiconductors? If not, it's never too late to get moving in that direction. As has long been known in our inner circles, Group III Nitride development (at all levels of the supply chain) is progressing so well that, collectively, the wide bandgaps are forgone front-runner as the most promising compound semi material types for a number of applications, especially blue spectrum LEDs of all levels of brightness, and as laser diodes and electronic devices. At our Blue 2003 event in Dallas last June, we heard from the brightest of the bright in next gen solid state lighting and lasers. Moral of their story, you really can't go wrong by following the blue spectrum. On top of that, GaN development for electronic applications was clearly the hot topic at the annual Outlook Dec. 15-17th in Dallas, which we'll report more on in the weeks ahead.

So, looking back, our top story of the year was clearly the Blue Spectrum Success. So successful, in fact, that we're taking the show devoted to that sector on the road. We're expanding the focus even more, and the official title of the '04 meet, slated for May 10-12 in Hsinchu, Taiwan is: Blue 2004: Advanced LEDs & Lasers. As we learned at Blue 2003, things are changing, and not so quietly anymore. Emerging from laboratory curiosity, the blue spectrum technologies have become a completed "industry". So, as the follow-on to our successful Blue 2003, we're adding to the blue spectrum big picture with updates and information on some of the up and coming advanced LED technologies that are clearly going to change the industry. And now that things are heating up under the blue laser standards arena for next gen LDs and hard discs, what's happening in advanced laser diodes takes a fresh, potentially very high volume twist. We'll have the agenda for Blue 2004 up soon, but all you need to do is talk to anyone who attended Blue 2003, and you'll understand why you need to be there.

The 2003 shifts in epitaxy suppliers and resulting marketing strategy will also go down in compound semi history as a very important turning point for our field. The shift was most dramatically illustrated when Veeco purchased Emcore's long-established TurboDisc MOCVD line of epi tools. (See End of an Era in MOCVD). 2004 will mark the first ever year when one company, Veeco, can offer the industry their choice of either MBE and MOCVD tools. Veeco's marketing ace, Jim Trevis cleverly illustrated this, symbolically, when giving each Outlook attendee a two-bottle gift pack of private label wine...one bottle of white wine, one bottle of red, with the message that the industry could now "have it either way." Another change within the MOCVD community is a feeling of freshness and community openness, led by Aixtron, along with Nippon Sanso and Nippon EMC expanding their commercial operations to the USA. And with the Dec. 18th announcement just out of Japan (ref: Forbes.com coverage) that Nippon Sanso will be merging with Taiyo Toyo Sanso, Nippon Sanso's role in MOCVD may start to strengthen. (Stay tuned for details after the holidays...) For the time being, Veeco and Aixtron are the major epi equipment players, and where they head, others are likely to follow. Aixtron's traditional good work in addressing the Oxides and Veeco's initiative on clustering machines of various types is the type thing we'll see more of as our field expands and influences other advanced semiconductor technologies beyond just the compounds. Clearly, we're converging with the advanced silicon world, not only with a variety of other base material types, but with an uplifting, cohesive industry-wide message that the compounds can help lead silicon up and out of their traditional boxes.

"Advanced Semi's" in 2004? Yes. It began with SiGe and SiC, but since those two material types had two names, we simply embraced them as "compounds." But... the adoption of those two material types by mainstream silicon users illustrates that we don't have to position ourselves against vanilla silicon anymore. And as we'll likely see in 2004, we're probably not going to remain an isolated compound semi community. With fields like nanotechnology, quantum wells, and MEMs finally moving into the mainstream, and with such a rich variety of laser technologies coming onboard, we'll likely all feel more comfortable thinking of our field more generically as "Advanced Semi" based. In fact, if you type in "advancedsemi.com" into your browser... guess where you go? (In case you're thinking "Why just 'semi' instead of its full name 'semiconductor'?" Just try typing that whole name accurately and quickly into your browser and you too will quickly shortcut to "semi").

So, say Hello to 2004. My prediction is that it will be a year of sensible expansion, a leveling of many playing fields, and closer cooperation that brings with it opportunities for more talented people that continue to advance the field of semiconductors as only our kind of professionals can... through continued innovation, improved manufacturing practices, and every more clever and environmentally friendly systems. Happy New Year and the best of luck to everyone in 2004.

If you have news or views to share about the compound semiconductor, LED or solid state lighting industries
contact our Publisher, Tom Griffiths
His direct tel in Austin is +1-512-257-9888

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