-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueWhat's Your Sweet Spot?
Are you in a niche that’s growing or shrinking? Is it time to reassess and refocus? We spotlight companies thriving by redefining or reinforcing their niche. What are their insights?
Moving Forward With Confidence
In this issue, we focus on sales and quoting, workforce training, new IPC leadership in the U.S. and Canada, the effects of tariffs, CFX standards, and much more—all designed to provide perspective as you move through the cloud bank of today's shifting economic market.
Intelligent Test and Inspection
Are you ready to explore the cutting-edge advancements shaping the electronics manufacturing industry? The May 2025 issue of SMT007 Magazine is packed with insights, innovations, and expert perspectives that you won’t want to miss.
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
A Catalyst for Advanced Packaging and Substrates
September 26, 2023 | Kirk Thompson, Isola GroupEstimated reading time: 3 minutes

Despite being a leader in R&D investment in semiconductors and packaging with greater than $50 billion per year, the U.S. has seen its market share decrease to less than 3% in areas like advanced packaging and advanced substrates. The cause for this market share erosion was a laser focus in Asian countries to attract semiconductors and advanced packaging investment through ecosystem development and incentives. If the U.S. is serious about changing the momentum in onshoring advanced packaging and advanced substrates, an ecosystem approach to innovation and manufacturing incentives must be employed. It is not enough to have the most innovative technology if the supply chain and manufacturing economics do not deliver competitive commercial opportunities.
To establish a U.S. ecosystem that enables innovation and commercialization of new technologies, we must establish a viable path to profitability at product launch and at high volume manufacturing with multiple points in the value chain, including materials, equipment, components, fabrication, and device manufacturing. Technology leadership can enable profitable business by being first to market and delivering differentiated value by solving unmet needs. Advanced packaging and advanced substrates present a unique opportunity to develop diverse discrete ecosystems as the needs for different technologies—ranging from 2.5D, 3D, panel level packaging, embedded designs, and advanced substrates—are unique and offer specific opportunities for multiple differentiated ecosystems.
Advanced substrates are essential to critical infrastructure and defense applications in the United States. Many of today’s leading brand owners and OEMs are here and looking for new device architectures that deliver best-in-class electrical properties, improved yield, and speed to market. Today, the ecosystem is very Asia-centric, and this creates supply chain risks and barriers to innovation. To establish an ecosystem here, we must identify specific unmet needs or challenges that are tied to an OEM or brand owner. These unmet needs are likely derived from improved electronic properties such as reduced loss, improved signal fidelity, or higher feature density.
Design engineers should contemplate how to improve electronic properties and offer solutions to challenges for an emerging ecosystem that delivers a new architecture meant to achieve the targeted electrical properties and the required yield and cost. Using an ecosystem approach at the system level offers best-in-class solutions to these needs and challenge. The best solutions will not come from one component of the value chain, but from multiple groups within the value chain. Feature sizes for advanced substrates are getting increasingly smaller, with thinner layers, higher layer counts, and more stringent electrical demands. Delivering thinner, lower loss, high reliability materials requires collaboration among materials, equipment, fabrication, and design. Materials companies deliver materials that meet the electrical, dimensional, and reliability performances. Equipment companies develop equipment and process flow that deliver the tolerances, electrical performance, and yield based on current and next generation materials. Brand owners/OEMs provide direction on future technology challenges and technology tradeoffs that are always required.
This ecosystem must break down conventional silos to deliver technology faster; provide world class expertise on design, materials, and equipment; and approach high value challenges with innovative system level thinking.
Although these ecosystems are valuable on their own merit, they can be accelerated through incentive programs like the CHIPS Act. Incentives have worked in countries like China to attract ecosystems and increase market share. A great example of that is the solar industry where China has invested $50 billion since 2011, which resulted in 300,000 jobs and enabled an 80% market share in solar panels1. The U.S. has made a similar commitment with the CHIPS Act. To be successful, we need to create discrete ecosystems that are targeting specific high value challenges that have been articulated by the leading OEM and brand owners. There needs to be U.S. capability to deliver fast material prototypes, and new equipment processes. The U.S. is a leader in device design, equipment, and materials technology. To win in advanced packaging and advanced substrates, we must have improved capability in materials and equipment prototyping and fabrication. The CHIPS Act is a catalyst, and the industry needs to rally around this to develop the right ecosystems and system approach to solving high value advanced packaging and substrate challenges.
References
- “China currently dominates global solar PV supply chains, International Energy Agency.
Kirk Thompson is chief technology officer at Isola Group.
This article originally appeared in the September 2023 issue of SMT007 Magazine.
Suggested Items
Global Dry Film Photoresist Market Set for Robust Growth with Expanding Semiconductor Ecosystem
06/24/2025 | PRNewswireIn 2024, the global market size of Dry Film Photoresist was estimated to be worth US$939 million and is forecast to reach approximately US$1191 million by 2031 with a CAGR of 3.5% during the forecast period 2025-2031.
Benchmark Strengthens Presence in Jalisco with Grand Opening of Advanced Manufacturing Facility in Guadalajara
06/21/2025 | BUSINESS WIREBenchmark Electronics, Inc., a global provider of engineering, design, and manufacturing services, celebrated the grand opening of its brand-new manufacturing facility in Guadalajara, Mexico.
NHanced Semiconductors VP Charles Woychik to Deliver Keynote at SMTA’s Symposium on Counterfeit Parts & Materials
06/18/2025 | NHanced SemiconductorsAt the upcoming SMTA Symposium on Counterfeit Parts & Materials, NHanced Semiconductors vice-president Dr. Charles Woychik will deliver a keynote address detailing the critical role of advanced packaging technologies needed to build a more resilient and advanced Outsourced Assembly and Test (OSAT) sector in the U.S. A strategic focus on advanced packaging technologies.
SEMI MEMS & Sensors Industry Group Invites Proposals for Funding Positioning, Navigation and Timing Technology Advancements
06/12/2025 | SEMIThe MEMS & Sensors Industry Group (MSIG), a SEMI Technology Community, announced a Request for Proposals (RFP) for advanced technology development of positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) components and systems, including their manufacture. The full RFP document includes more information on the proposal submission process.
DuPont/Qnity Innovators in Semiconductor Materials Named 2025 Heroes of Chemistry
06/10/2025 | DuPontDuPont today announced that 13 of its current and former scientists and engineers have been named 2025 Heroes of Chemistry by the American Chemical Society (ACS) for an innovative program that progressed semiconductor lithography.