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March 14, 2005...TriQuint Semiconductor of Hillsboro, Oregon USA is moving rapidly onto everyone's
radar screens as an open foundry catalyst for GaN materials and devices for
a variety of electronic applications. The company, which bases its operations
in both Oregon and Texas, has been working on GaN electronics since 199 and
is the second to announce
what appears to be shaping up as a trio of impressive GaN on SiC for Wide Bandgap
(WBG) semiconductor contracts from the USA's Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA), the other two prime contractor teams being led by giants Northrop
Grumman and Raytheon (ref:
our coverage). TriQuint's contract is specifically to develop high power
wide band HEMT GaN on SiC amplifiers. Program goals are to develop 100W power,
30% PAE @ 2-20GHz HEMTs targeted at achieving the higher power density and efficiency
required for high power phased array radar, electronic warfare, missile seeker
and communications systems. The Army Research Laboratory in Adelphi, Maryland
will monitor TriQuint's contract, which has already begun in Richardson, Texas
under internal funding by the company.
Phase 1 of TriQuint's contract will last three years and is valued at $15.8
million and the second, optional phase that moves the GaN on SiC amplifiers
into insertion in DoD systems covers years four and five and is valued at $15.9
million. TriQuint's team members are an impressive litany of individuals and
companies, and includes his phase will develop gallium nitride high power, wide
band amplifiers and package technology for insertion into DoD systems. TriQuint
is the prime and they've teamed with none other than BAE Systems and Lockheed
Martin as their systems integrator partners, Emcore Corporation for the GaN
on SiC epiwafers, II-VI Incorporated as their suppliers of starting SiC, and
Nitronex (the rising stars of GaN on Silicon in North Carolina) as TriQuint's
pros at reliability. Strong reliability data is key to TriQuint's approach.
University partners are Dr. Michael Shur of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
and Dr. Jesus del Alamo of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The program
tasks include material optimization, device development, MMIC development and
module demonstration. The contract emphasizes reliability, yield, uniformity
and reproducibility. The program also includes a MMIC validation process. At
the end of the five-year program, TriQuint Semiconductor will have a reliable,
reproducible and stable gallium nitride process suitable for DoD and commercial
applications... and the open market.
"TriQuint is very excited to be leading a highly qualified team in
the development of this new technology. Gallium nitride offers a five-fold improvement
in power density compared to gallium arsenide devices, and makes it ideal for
high power radar and communications applications," said Mr. Anthony
Balistreri, TriQuint's program manager for research and development. "TriQuint
looks forward to providing high volume, cost effective foundry services and
standard products based on gallium nitride," Tony added. "We
have assembled an excellent team, with strengths in the key areas called out
in the program requirements," said Dr. Paul Saunier, TriQuint's principal
investigator. "The team will combine talent and experience to minimize
risk and reduce development time, leading to a successful development effort."
For more details on this DARPA GaN on SiC WBG initiative, reference our March
14th Editorial.
Toyoda Gosei and TridonicAtco to Establish Joint Venture for Development and Production of White LEDs CompoundSemi News StaffMarch 14, 2005...Toyoda Gosei of Aichi, Japan and TridonicAtco of Zumtobel Group with headquarters
in Dornbirn, Austria, are going to establish a joint venture based in Jennersdorf,
Austria in April to advance the development of high-power white LEDs. The new
joint venture will produce high-power LED packages and components for the general lighting market. Content continues for LIGHTimes SecondPage members... Lumileds and SAIC Win DARPA Contract to Produce Prototype of LED-based Flashlights for USA Troops CompoundSemi News StaffMarch 14, 2005...Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) with headquarters in San
Diego, California USA and Lumileds of San Jose, California won a DARPA contract
to produce prototypes of LED-based flashlights for USA forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
This DARPA project will evaluate the effectiveness of using these flashlights
with a range of state-of-the-art optical technologies, while maintaining the same
form factor that troops in the field are already using. The prototypes will integrate
SAIC’s nonimaging optics, SureFire’s flashlight manufacturing technology
and Lumileds Lighting’s high-brightness light-emitting diode (LED) light
sources.
Content continues for LIGHTimes SecondPage members... Keithley Introduces Two Automated Test Products CompoundSemi News StaffMarch 14, 2005...Keithley Instruments Inc. of Cleveland, Ohio USA introduced the Series 2600 System SourceMeter Instruments, that boast a lower cost of testing silicon and compound semiconductor components with increased throughput. Keithley also introduced the RF measurement Option touted as the only test system qualified for on-wafer parametric process control by 200mm and 300mm production fabs worldwide for applications involving high-performance logic and high-performance analog IC production and the only system that can provide fully automated RF measurements without an RF specialist. One key feature that helps it perform above other test equipment is its ability to continuously monitor measurement integrity and recalibrate as needed.
The 2600 System performs precision DC, pulse, and low-frequency AC source-measure tests. The 2600 system provides an intelligent Test Script Processor which allows users to program and automate a series of commands. Flexible triggering and flow control capability allows TSP to control other instruments, component handlers, or probers. According to Keithley, the instrumentation automation capability gives a 10X greater test throughput over legacy systems. Keithley points out another key benefit of the 2600 system, its ability to help save time and money during test system development. The Test Script Builder comes with a graphical user interface (GUI) and it features a built-in suite of pre-written TSP programs that can be quickly modified. The company says this feature alone can cut the software development time by 75%. The 2600 system has a patented technology called TSP Link, which can function as a synchronization trigger and inter-unit communication bus that allows a single TSP program to control up to 16 or more source meter channels. The system, useful in compound semiconductor and solid state lighting industries, can test RFIC’s, power amplifiers, and LEDs, and their drivers. It can perform a variety of tests on varistor, transistors, diodes. In addition it can do a number of different feedback loop functions and algorithm-based tests. Genus Shareholders Approve Merger by Acquisition With Aixtron CompoundSemi News StaffMarch 11, 2005...In a special meeting Thursday, share holders of Genus Inc. of Sunnyvale, California
USA, a leading provider of thin film deposition equipment for the semiconductor
and data storage industries, overwhelmingly approved the merger by acquisition
of their company with Aixtron AG of Aachen, Germany. Of the aproximately 61 percent
of Genus share holders voting (well over the 50% of the shareholders required
to conduct business), 94% of those who voted (much greater than the simple majority
of voters required for a decision), approved the acquisition and merger of their
company with Aixtron AG.
In trading that commenced on NASDAQ on Friday, March 11, Genus shareholders
will receive 0.51 Aixtron American Depository Shares (ADS) in exchange for each
Genus share. According to the Genus news
release, the Aixtron ordinary shares underlying the ADS are also expected
to be admitted for trading next week at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. Commenting
on the merger, Paul Hyland, CEO of Aixtron AG, said, "We are delighted
that the Genus shareholders voted in favor of the transaction. By combining
the two companies we are creating one of the world's premier suppliers of advanced
deposition technologies for the semiconductor industry. This transaction enables
us to leverage the two companies' complementary strengths and gain the critical
mass required to successfully compete in both the compound semiconductor and
semiconductor equipment industries."
Asian Press RoundupMarch 11, 2005...We found news of Taiwan’s white LED production for 2005, and news updates
for United Epitaxy of Hsinchu,Taiwan, Formosa Epitaxy also of Hsinchu, Taiwan,
and the South Korean branch of the Hsinchu company AOT in Asian news outlets. LIGHTimes
2nd Page members can access details... Content continues for LIGHTimes SecondPage members... USA DoD Awards Northrop Grumman $16.5 Million to Transition Wide Bandgap Electronics into Production CompoundSemi News StaffMarch 9, 2005...Indicative of the USA's continued defense buildup, the DoD's elite Defense Agency Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which works closely with other DoD funding agencies within the military branches, has awarded one of the USA's premier defense conglomerates, Northrop Grumman of Redondo Beach, California USA, an initial contract of $16.5 million to transition Wide Bandgap (WBG) semicondutors for RF applications into production. The three-year contract, builds on NG's 2002 Phase 1 WBG initiative worth $5.1 million to further develop radio frequency applications for the USA military, and the contract carries with it a potential follow-on of up to $53 million if all the program options are exercised by the involved parties. According to Dwight Streit, a name very familiar to our community for his compound semi development work at TRW, who is now VP of Northrop Grumman's "Technology Foundation" group in what's now called the NG's Space Technology sector, "This new contract will enable us to transition gallium nitride technology from development to production, just as we have previously transitioned gallium arsenide and indium phosphide technologies from research through development to flight-qualified production for critical government platforms."
WBG development, much of which revolves around Group III Nitride (a.k.a. GaN) materials, has been rapidly improving, especially in the USA as GaN electronics show increasingly impressive strides. Other USA military agencies in addition to DARPA that are heavily involved in WBG support include the Air Force, via Wright Labs, the Navy, via the Office of Naval Research (ONR) and the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) and the Army Research Lab (ARL), all of whom work closely with DARPA... and with one another. A considerable number of universities and small companies in the USA are funded under a variety of WBG governent initiatives. Special note as updated on March 14th... This NG contract is the first publicized of three major team awards by DARPA, all of which involve GaN on SiC. The other two awards, which will go to teams headed by Raytheon and TriQuint, will be publicized soon, and commented on in our McDonald Report . Our news features are reported
by the CompoundSemi News staff writers.
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