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What happens when the rule book is no longer useful, or worse, was never written in the first place? In today’s fast-moving electronics landscape, we’re increasingly asked to design and build what has no precedent, no proven path, and no tidy checklist to follow. This is where “Design for Invention” begins.
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From the growing role of AI in design tools to the challenge of managing cumulative tolerances, these articles in this issue examine the technical details, design choices, and manufacturing considerations that determine whether a board works as intended.
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OKI Develops 180-Layer, 15 mm PCB for AI Semiconductor Test Equipment
April 29, 2026 | BUSINESS WIREEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
OKI Circuit Technology, the OKI Group’s printed circuit board (PCB) business company, has successfully developed design and production technologies for 180-layer, 15 mm-thick PCBs intended for use in wafer testing equipment for high bandwidth memory (HBM) mounted on AI semiconductors. This represents an approximate 45% increase in layer count and approximately doubled board thickness compared to the previous 124-layer, 7.6 mm-thick configuration. OTC is pushing ahead with establishing mass production technology and setting up the required equipment at its Joetsu Plant, with the aim of starting mass production and shipment in October 2026. The plant, located in Joetsu City, Niigata Prefecture, which has a proven track record and advanced development and production capabilities in the field of high multilayer, high-precision, large-format PCBs for semiconductor testing equipment.
Due to the enormous numbers of signals handled by the latest AI semiconductors as well as rising number of chips mounted on wafers accompanying process miniaturization, PCBs for testing equipment must feature ever higher densities (reduced pitches) and layer counts. However, increasing the board thickness makes the characteristic impedance of vias more difficult to control; the power supply performance drops due to vias passing through power supply layers; and the drilling process for accurately boring fine, deep via holes involves technical limitations. Due to these constraints, the practical limits for single ultra-high-multilayer PCBs to address all these challenges had been 124 layers and 7.6 mm thickness, unable to meet future demand for high-speed, high-frequency, and high-density data transfer.
This time, OTC developed two technologies: Sintering Paste for Via Bonding, a conductive paste inter-substrate via bonding technology that allows multiple multilayer PCBs to be stacked and connected (by joining the vias on their surfaces); and a technology for manufacturing ultra-high-thickness PCBs measuring up to 15 mm thick. OTC combined these two technologies to establish design and production technologies for proprietary 180-layer, 15 mm-thick PCBs formed by stacking and connecting three 60-layer PCBs. By addressing via characteristic control, signal quality, and power supply performance issues for each multilayer PCB using well-established conventional technologies, individual multilayer PCBs can be stacked, enabling both ultra-high multilayering and superior performance and quality. This technology provides customers with the performance and quality needed to meet future demand for high-speed, high-frequency, and high-density data transfer.
OTC has developed these new technologies with an eye on fields expected to see significant growth—AI semiconductors, AI servers, aerospace and defense, and next-generation communications. OTC will continue to adapt to technological advancements and actively work on further development of PCBs and manufacturing technologies.
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Sweeney Ng - CEE PCBSuggested Items
From Backbone to Breakthroughs: I-Connect007 Wraps PCB Materials Series with Focus on Innovation
04/30/2026 | I-Connect007I-Connect007 wraps up its six-part podcast series, PCB Materials: The Backbone and Future of Electronics, with Episode 6 and a discussion focusing on innovation. In Episode 6, Marcy LaRont speaks with Isola CTO Kirk Thompson about a critical turning point for the PCB industry as innovation accelerates. As data rates climb and demands from AI infrastructure, power density, flexible electronics, photonics, and chiplet integration intensify, traditional material assumptions are no longer sufficient.
A Designer's Focus on High Density
04/30/2026 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007 MagazineVern Solberg is a distinguished member of the Global Electronics Association Raymond E. Pritchard Hall of Fame and has served as chair or vice chair of many committees, developing technical standards and implementation guidelines, including the IPC-7090 series, which focuses on design for manufacturing and reliability for electronic assemblies. He’s a long-time contributor to Design007 Magazine, and he conducted a half-day tutorial at APEX EXPO 2026, where he addressed 2D, 2.5D, and 3D packaging and ultra-high density hybrid bond interconnect. I caught up with Vern at the show and asked about his pivot from addressing more standard design challenges to his focus on high-density circuits.
American Made Advocacy: Rebuilding America’s Military Stockpiles Begins With Microelectronics
04/28/2026 | Shane Whiteside -- Column: American Made AdvocacyCurrent world events demonstrate the fragility of long-distance supply chains transiting multiple zones of conflict. The U.S. military is currently drawing down supplies of key munitions and other electronic systems at unprecedented rates.1Every one of those systems is powered by printed circuit boards. The American PCB industry has kept pace with peacetime demand for the defense industry, but will now be called upon to increase production to a wartime footing at rates not seen in decades.
EDIP Opens the Door: EU Funding Now Available for Defence Electronics Including PCBs and Substrates
04/21/2026 | Alison James and Chris Mitchell, Global Electronics AssociationThe European Commission has published a call for proposals under the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), and for European electronics manufacturers the message is clear: this is real money for real capacity, and PCBs and IC substrates are explicitly in scope. EDIP's Industrial Reinforcement Actions (IRA) dedicate €122.25 million to key electronic components, covering guidance electronics, propulsion electronics, RF and laser modules, multispectral cameras, avionics, PCBs and IC substrates, lithium-ion polymer batteries, power electronics, and critical semiconductor building blocks
Driving Precision: All4-PCB’s Push for Smarter Inspection and Better Boards
04/17/2026 | Real Time with... APEX EXPOAt APEX EXPO 2026, all4-PCB's booth stayed busy until the very end. In this interview, Managing Director Ralph Jacobo highlights what he sees as strong market momentum in North America driven by increased demand for advanced PCB manufacturing technologies. He emphasizes investments in multilayer lamination, propelled by AI infrastructure, aerospace, and HDI complexity, where precision and uniformity are critical.