Technical Viewpoint
Facing the Challenges of
APC's Second Decade
Alan
Weber
Advanced
process control (APC) has had a major impact on the semiconductor manufacturing
industry since the term was first coined by Sematech more than a decade
ago. It is the unifying theme for a community of practitioners who congregate
by the hundreds at three annual conferences around the globe. And it has
spawned a dedicated group of suppliers that serve the APC market segment
with a wide range of products and services, from sensors to fabwide control
and optimization systems.
Now
a mainstream production technology, APC is considered essential for the
300-mm, 130-nm technology node and beyond. As a result, it has attracted
much attention and investment funds over the years. However, like many
other competitive segments in the cyclical IC industry, APC is not an
easy business to be in. Continued progress at the rate we have come to
expect will depend on improving our effectiveness in that area.
The
need for improvement was the main motivation behind a recent series of
discussions with APC veterans involved in both the business and technology
arenas. Engaged in activities from fundamental R&D to standards development,
their host organizations include equipment and components suppliers, software
product and services vendors, and IC manufacturers at the head of the
food chain. A summary of the collective challenges facing APC, the opportunities
for addressing them, and the changes that may take place in the coming
decade are the subjects of this article.
Key
Questions
Emerging
from the deepest industry downturn in 20 years, the APC community must
address several important questions that will shape the APC software market
segment for much of the coming decade:
• In
what direction is the commercial semiconductor APC software market heading—will
it grow, remain flat, or decline? How does the industry value software?
• What
business models have or have not worked in selling software to semiconductor
manufacturing customers? What changes in end-user software buying behavior
would improve business models?
• What
types of organizations are planning to develop APC software? How much
will be done by the end-users themselves?
•
What are the prospects that process and metrology OEMs will supply application
software beyond embedded control systems?
• What
other factors have limited the growth of the APC market segment? What
is going to happen from this point forward?
Commercial
Software Market Outlook
Everyone
has opinions about the place of commercial manufacturing software in the
semiconductor industry (including APC)—and they're all over the map.
But the prevailing attitude is fairly positive. There are several reasons
for this. First, the ever-increasing complexity of process and equipment
technology requires a high degree of specialization to develop viable
control solutions, creating an opportunity for process-specific niche
suppliers. Second, chip fabrication at current and future technology nodes
relies heavily on automation, which demands much more overall systems
engineering than has been applied to date. That, in turn, increases the
market for system technologies. Moreover, end-users have much more access
to process information than they did previously, partly because of the
passage and continuing adoption of SEMI's diagnostic data
acquisition/equipment data acquisition (DDA/EDA) standards. Finally, the
rosy demand picture for commercial software products is emerging against
the dark backdrop of the industry's three-year recession, which is preventing
end-users from growing their IT resources at the same rate they did in
the pre-2001 period.
Although
the market outlook is largely optimistic, industry observers across the
board view the overall valuation of manufacturing software as problematic,
especially when compared with software of comparable complexity such as
design automation products. While manufacturing software is seen as a
method for reducing costs (and is purchased by organizations under continual
cost pressure), design software is seen as an asset for increasing revenues,
where time to market is the principal concern. Moreover, the purchase
price of standard commercial software is often capped by a customer's
build-versus-buy analysis for a custom solution, which seldom considers
the same functional and technology requirements as a commercial product
or ongoing support costs. Until these factors are well understood and
appreciated, manufacturing commercial software will continue to be a tough
business.
APC
Business Models
APC
business models have evolved as technology and the market have undergone
great changes over the past few years. To be successful, any business
model must make it easy for customers to purchase what they need at all
stages of adoption—from first contact through the feasibility study phase
to fabwide deployment. What this means from a pricing perspective is that
the cost to a customer and the value delivered must scale at the same
rate. Given the expertise needed to deploy and maintain APC products successfully,
the mix of service costs, license or usage fees, and maintenance/support
rates must be balanced against the long-term viability of the business
in question. That lesson was learned the hard way in the manufacturing
execution systems (MES) sector.
In
the business model that resulted from the downturn, prospective customers
expect free product evaluations. Although this practice may be good or
bad depending on which side of the purchasing table you sit, it is here
to stay in an environment in which the number of independent global customers
is shrinking. However, the goal of free evaluations must be to validate
how potential solutions fit problems, not to postpone real project expenses
under the cover of "free" consulting.
Finally,
since no single solution will satisfy all of a customer's needs, technologies
and attitudes that support effective coexistence with other APC solutions
are necessary. The sooner an entire team is picked and begins to work
on its shared objectives, the better.
Who
Should Develop APC Technology? Depends on Your Perspective...
Chipmakers.
Semiconductor manufacturers generally agree with one another in many APC-related
areas. But being engineers at heart, they all tend to drift across the
boundary between system requirements and solution design, ultimately limiting
the range of potential systems and suppliers available to them and probably
adding unnecessary costs. Chipmakers' energies would be better spent developing
real end-user (i.e., process engineering) requirements, creating detailed
test plans and other artifacts that increase the likelihood of success.
One
reason that end-users spend so much time in "solution space" is that most
of the leading ones are developing their own run-to-run (R2R) control
software and the required system infrastructures, relying on the commercial
market for fault detection and classification (FDC) packages. R2R and
FDC systems differ from each other in two respects: First, R2R software
requires more connections to complementary factory systems and is therefore
inherently more custom than FDC; and second, the intellectual property
(IP) incorporated in R2R systems is viewed as more process- or operations-specific
and, therefore, more closely guarded than FDC systems.
Another
key factor in end-users' APC project planning is that many of them have
been burned too many times buying software from either tool OEMs, resulting
in commitment and capability issues, or small software companies, raising
survival issues. Consequently, many end-users rely on their own efforts
to create critical APC technology.
Advanced
Micro Devices (AMD) is the most visible example of a chipmaker committed
to internal APC technology development. The company runs corporate- and
fab-level organizations that provide the full range of disciplines to
build, deploy, and support APC applications. While these applications
run in a common commercial environment, the bulk of the real process control
technology resides in the custom software created by AMD itself.
Most
semiconductor manufacturers want more-detailed process data from the equipment
they use and expect OEMs to make it accessible to them. Their motivation
is to better understand fundamental tool and process behavior, which is
the first step toward improving performance. Ultimately, it is in the
tool suppliers' best interest to provide chipmakers with critical tool
information, but IP ownership hurdles remain.
Finally,
what do chipmakers expect from software suppliers? They believe that their
suppliers must listen better to understand real production software
requirements and should spend more time in the fab to fully appreciate
the meaning of "mission critical." Some IC manufacturers have even suggested
that every software engineer's "rite of passage" should include a serious
assignment on a production test or support team. There is no better way
to prevent middle-of-the-night support calls than to put the developers
on the front line.
Software
Suppliers. The industry's software suppliers are a dedicated,
hard-working group whose opinions are every bit as strong as the chipmakers'.
First and foremost, they believe that their applications depend on good
data to perform properly and that everyone would benefit if the chipmakers
would demand better data quality and more openness from the OEMs. Addressing
these issues may come slowly, however, since many data-quality problems
are caused by the limitations of the equipment's embedded control systems,
not the standards that define the external interfaces.
The
wave of internal development on the chipmaker side is a major cause for
concern among software suppliers, because it is coming at a time when
the suppliers hope (and need) to see some return on the investments they
made during the long downturn. This conflict points to a deeper structural
issue, namely the inharmonicity of semiconductor business cycles (see
Figure 1).
 |
| Figure
1: Representational diagram showing the inharmonicity of semiconductor
business cycles. |
The
APC product development cycle takes at least two years and requires outlays
totaling millions of dollars from the initial requirements stage to first
release. In contrast, the sales cycle can span nine months or longer for
a complex, fab-level system. In addition, closing an APC deal with an
end-user often requires the support of the same scarce technical personnel
who must put the finishing touches on the product.
Once
a sale is made, the next cycle is the customer deployment process itself,
which may last two to three years from the initial pilot phase in a single
process area to a full production rollout across an entire fab. Juxtapose
all of this on the industry's infamous boom/bust cycle, and no wonder
there is so much churning in the APC supplier base.
However,
every problem presents new opportunities, and this case is no exception.
Realizing that semiconductor manufacturing is truly a "custom" industry,
several suppliers are responding to industry challenges with products
that enable a fab's internal IT and process engineering staff to buy and/or
build APC applications that meet their local specifications while allowing
them to operate in the company's overall framework. One such approach
is to combine a robust industrial platform and a "plant-centric" application
model (see Figure 2). Building a layered system on the elements that vary
the least in a factory (equipment, processes, and materials) is a novel
way to maximize a system's stability while enabling almost unlimited degrees
of freedom in the higher-level business processes. The higher up the pyramid
a supplier goes to supply a "complete" solution, the more custom it becomes.
Hence, while particular customers or fabs may see very high value in a
complete APC approach, most will be unwilling to buy into a specific package
that embraces everything from sensors to fab goals.
 |
| Figure
2: A "plant-centric" APC application model can meet the specifications
of fab elements that are least variable (from the bottom of the pyramid
up). |
Several
software companies offer commercial APC products from generic stand-alone
FDC packages to process-specific analysis and control systems to fab-level
application and integration frameworks. The diversity of the players in
this space is demonstrated by the companies that participate in the yearly
AEC/APC symposiums sponsored by International Sematech.
Equipment
Suppliers. Equipment and subsystems suppliers have a key part
to play in the APC area, but their role is still in flux. Most suppliers'
APC efforts focus appropriately on the local aspect of the control problem
(i.e., advanced equipment control); their goal is to hit the process targets
that are set for a given run.
While
some toolmakers are responding to end-user requests for more and better
data, they are not likely to fully adopt the new SEMI DDA/EDA standards
until customers demand them in their purchase orders. Still others are
beginning to provide process-specific analysis and modeling software to
enable deeper process understanding and fab-level optimization and control.
The latter group have even dabbled in this market directly.
However,
over the years the same toolmakers have "trained" their customers to expect
free software, an expectation that will be very hard to undo given the
high cost of semiconductor equipment and the competitive nature of the
APC market. Consequently, the best return on a supplier's APC product
investment will be through a software channel.
Tokyo
Electron is the best example of an equipment supplier that has shown a
long-term, strategic commitment to APC product technology (beyond embedded
control systems). However, their products are only marketed with TEL equipment.
Moreover, the company has not tackled the general-purpose R2R control
market.
The
Persistent Integration Problem
Integration
was the biggest barrier to the adoption of APC technology in the mid-1990s,
and it still accounts for nearly 50% of the effort required to deploy
a production solution. The need for integration spawned the original APC
Framework program (a more than $10 million, four-year investment scheme)
and related standardization efforts. Integration continues to drive much
in-house development. The industry is taking another shot at this target
through the process control systems task force, a follow-on SEMI body
that has focused on determining the major "functional groups" that comprise
the APC space and specifying the message sets they use to communicate
among themselves and with other fab systems.
However,
communications is only part of the problem, and standards will only provide
part of the solution. Why? First, because APC is fundamentally a continuous-improvement
technology—the more you apply it, the more ideas you have to improve
it. It is impossible to standardize things you have not thought of yet.
Second, advanced APC algorithms depend on good data, which increasingly
come from process tools and many other sources. At this point, it is hard
to forecast what form these algorithms will take and, therefore, the nature
of their interactions with other systems. As we have seen with the GEM300
standardization efforts over the past five to six years, integration in
an automated environment involves much more than just communications.
The
APC market is still relatively immature and very dynamic—there will be
many valid solutions to complex processing problems. Therefore,
APC-related integration will be a moving target for some time to come.
Conclusion
The
investment in new fab construction around the world represents the first
chance for the industry to quantify the benefits of APC when applied early
in a fab's life cycle. With only one or two exceptions, APC has been installed
in fabs only after tools and processes have been qualified and used in
early production and after many other complementary systems have been
selected and installed. However, shortening a fab's "time to money" by
just a couple of months can yield huge returns, as shown in the graph
in Figure 3. Much required tool and process characterization can be well
supported with only a partial system infrastructure. As the mechanisms
and standards for integrating disparate manufacturing systems continually
improve, the selection and deployment of an initial APC platform does
not have to wait until all other related systems are in place.
 |
| Figure
3: Applying APC early in a fab's life cycle can yield significant
returns. |
We
have come a long way since the first AEC/APC symposium in the early 1990s,
and the current challenges will be overcome (and replaced by new ones!)
as the APC market matures in response to increasing demand. How quickly
that will happen will depend largely on the degree of collaboration among
industry players. An open discussion of requirements, problems, and progress
will result in the most efficient use of the industry's APC talent. That,
indeed, should be our common goal.
Acknowledgments
The
author would like to thank his partners, Jim Hollister and Paul McGuire,
for their help in preparing this article. He would also like to acknowledge
the many industry colleagues who have freely shared their insights about
APC over the past few months.
Alan
Weber is the president of Alan Weber & Associates, a consulting
company that specializes in semiconductor advanced process control, E-diagnostics,
and other related manufacturing systems technologies. Previously, he was
the vice president/general manager of KLA-Tencor's control solutions division,
which the company acquired from ObjectSpace. While at ObjectSpace, Weber
created the fab solutions division and was responsible for the company's
semiconductor manufacturing systems business, including development of
the APC Framework and its eventual commercialization and global deployment.
Before joining ObjectSpace, Weber spent eight years at Sematech, where
he was responsible for advanced manufacturing systems and related standards
R&D, including the CIM framework. He received a bachelor's and a master's
degree in electrical engineering from Rice University in Houston. (Weber
can be reached at 512/494-0700 or alan@alanweberassociates.com.)

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