-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueIntelligent 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.
Do You Have X-ray Vision?
Has X-ray’s time finally come in electronics manufacturing? Join us in this issue of SMT007 Magazine, where we answer this question and others to bring more efficiency to your bottom line.
IPC APEX EXPO 2025: A Preview
It’s that time again. If you’re going to Anaheim for IPC APEX EXPO 2025, we’ll see you there. In the meantime, consider this issue of SMT007 Magazine to be your golden ticket to planning the show.
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
The Growing Need for UHDI
November 30, 2022 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamEstimated reading time: 3 minutes

Jan Pedersen of NCAB Group is deeply involved in IPC standards development surrounding ultra HDI and keeps his finger on the pulse of the industry surrounding this type of fabrication. With Asia still dominating this area, Jan sees the need for U.S. and European PCB fabricators to make the investment if they want to stay competitive.
Nolan Johnson: Jan, you’re very involved in UHDI design and manufacturing. What’s your perspective on these topics within the industry now, and where UHDI is going?
Jan Pedersen: There are seven to 10 factories globally that can produce what we call ultra HDI. The definition for UHDI is 50-micron and below track and gap. You can use subtractive methods down to, let’s say, 35 or 40 microns, and then when you creep down below that level you need mSAP or xSAP technologies.
That has been around for many years. It’s not really a new technology. It was introduced into the packaging or the component industry in the 1970s and ‘80s, but it was brought up again when Apple and others started to do smartphones. There are those factories that are involved in this, but they are factored for one customer, so it’s very hard for a smaller customer to get into UHDI, and most companies are smaller than Apple.
If you are a bit smaller, you don’t get access. It’s simple as that. I’ve tried it myself, tried to place an order with a big European PCB group that claims they have the capability. But when you have your Gerbers and your data and you want to produce boards there, they say, “Oh, sorry. This is basically for one customer,” and they don’t accept us putting their competitors, which could be anybody, into the same factory.
Johnson: Given that, what is driving the development of UHDI?
Pedersen: For us, it’s coming from telecom and 5G, and you assume we’ll see 6G. But quite a few of our customers come from these industries. We see that need growing in the automotive and medical industries, and I’m discussing it almost globally. I’m looking to see if there is any availability of production capabilities in the U.S. today. We don’t find it. There’s one factory in Europe that has limited capacity, and then the rest are in Asia and producing for the big names.
Johnson: Where does HDI stop and UHDI begin?
Pedersen: Let’s use the ultra HDI definition of 50 microns down. It’s subtractive down to approximately 40 microns.
Where we are today approximately on BGA pitch below 350 microns, we talk about pads of 140, and then you are basically into mSAP or substrate-like PCB technologies, whatever that is. There are quite a few technologies out there now that can be used. But we see that we are going from a subtractive into an mSAP level; this depends on where you are coming from and how far you are coming with the investments in your factory, because some of the factories that are producing mSAP have invested in imaging, AOI—everything needed for that resolution now.
When you have a subtractive in that factor, they can go quite far down here. But if you don’t have all the other investments and just go for mSAP, that doesn’t help you.
I’m saying this as background because you have this producibility level C in IPC-2226, where you have 50-micron track and gap. Everything below that is ultra HDI—substrate-like PCBs can be produced by either subtractive or SAP-related technologies. If you go below that again, down to 15 to 20 microns, you need an embedded trace substrate or similar technologies. Then of course you come to high-end IC substrates which are in single microns.
In the U.S. today for substrate-like PCB, it’s below 50 microns, not touching 20 microns, but maybe 35 or 40. When I had my Gerbers and asked for quotations, they said they couldn’t do it. They do have mSAP equipment, if you can call it that, or a process in-house, but have not yet invested in the imaging and AOI that is able to detect down to 20 microns. I think they stop somewhere around 35 today.
To read this entire conversation, which appeared in the November 2022 issue of PCB007 Magazine, click here.
Suggested Items
Hunting for Clues: Feng Xue Solving Circuit Board 'Crimes' With AOI Standard
05/08/2025 | Linda Stepanich, IPCWhen residents in sleepy English villages needed a top-tier detective to solve a murder, they called on Belgian super-sleuth Hercule Poirot, author Agatha Christie’s fictional detective famous for using his “little grey cells” to solve crimes. In the same way, IPC standards development committees, when creating a standard to detect defects in circuit boards using Automated Optical Inspection (AOI), call on IPC A-Team, Hercule.
IPC Strengthens Global Focus with Promotion of Sanjay Huprikar to Chief Global Officer
05/08/2025 | IPCIPC, the global electronics association, announces the promotion of Sanjay Huprikar to chief global officer. This newly created position reflects the association’s forward-looking strategy and industry needs to strengthen the electronics supply chain.
Navigating Global Manufacturing in an Era of Uncertainty
05/07/2025 | Philip Stoten, ScoopThe EMS industry faces unprecedented challenges as global trade tensions rise and tariff announcements create market uncertainty. In an overview of IPC Europe’s podcast, MADE IN EUROPE, industry experts from GPV and Zollner examine how these developments impact our businesses and customers, and what strategies will prevail in this new landscape.
Nick Koop Launches IPC Flex Design Class
05/06/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007 MagazineNick Koop is director of flex technology for TTM Technologies, and he’s been a staple of IPC’s flex committees for decades. He’s also a longtime flex design instructor, and he’s about to debut a new IPC class, Flex and Rigid-Flex Design for Manufacturability, which will run May 12–21. In this interview, Nick tells us about this new class and what attendees can expect to learn.
The Government Circuit: Trump’s Trade War Disrupts the Electronics Ecosystem
05/06/2025 | Chris Mitchell -- Column: The Government CircuitThere is certainly no shortage of work to be done in the IPC Government Relations department, as the U.S. waged a tariff campaign on practically every industrial country in the world and several countries embarked on high-tech initiatives with a mix of approaches to the crucial foundations of electronics manufacturing. Indeed, the breadth and speed of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff campaign continues to be a serious challenge for our industry.