Packaging Technologies Redefine AI And HPC Scalability Limits At ECTC 2026


The 2026 IEEE Electronic Components and Technology Conference (ECTC) showcased how advanced packaging can redefine the scalability limits of artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC). Across 20 technical papers, Intel Foundry engineers and collaborators highlighted breakthrough innovations — from Embedded Multi-die Interconnect Bridge-T (EMIB-T) enabling large multi-d... » read more

Panel-Level Packaging’s Second Wave Meets Engineering Reality


Key Takeaways Panel-level packaging is arriving not because the engineering is ready, but because wafer-level economics are breaking down. Glass improves the warpage and dimensional stability problems of organic substrates but introduces a different class of failure modes that require materials solutions, not process adjustments. The central challenges of panel-level processing are m... » read more

Through The Glass: Why The Rapid Development Of TGV Demands Rigorous Analysis


The drive for increased performance is enticing some advanced packaging manufacturers to transition from traditional organic substrates to glass core substrates, a switch that comes with numerous benefits. Compared to organic substrates, glass core offers superior mechanical strength, is better suited for large package sizes, provides improved electrical properties, and has the ability to meet ... » read more

Glass Substrates Gain Momentum


As a package substrate, the benefits of glass are substantial. It's extremely flat with lower thermal expansion than organic substrates, which simplifies lithography. And that's just for starters. Warpage, a growing problem for multichip packages, is greatly reduced. Chips can be hybrid bonded to redistribution layer pads on glass. And relative to organic-core substrates, glass provides very... » read more

Comprehensive Process Control Solutions For Through-Glass Vias


At some point in our lives, we have dropped a drinking glass or knocked over a glass-blown knickknack, only to watch it hit the floor and shatter into pieces. We learn from any early age that glass is fragile. But if glass is so fragile, why are manufacturers adopting glass core substrates? Good question. And one that comes with a ready answer. Glass is able to meet the new, denser line-s... » read more

Innovations Driving The Advanced Packaging Roadmap: Part One


Advanced IC substrates (AICS) have been marching toward the 2µm line/space (L/S) redistribution layer (RDL) technology node for some time (figure 1). However, many questions remain about the ability of organic substrates to meet the line/space requirements of the next generation of advanced packages (AP), those below 2µm L/S and perhaps to 1.5µm L/S. Simply put: are organic substrates up to ... » read more

The Long Climb: Bringing Through Glass Vias (TGV) To High-Volume Manufacturing


The semiconductor industry is a land of peaks and valleys. It’s a place where each innovation represents the culmination of a long and often difficult climb to the summit. In the case of glass substrates, the peak of the mountain is in sight. The arrival of glass substrates comes at an opportune time, as the industry eyes new process innovations to meet the incredible demand for high perfo... » read more

Emerging Technologies Driving Heterogeneous Integration


As chips are disaggregated into chiplets, more features are being added into these devices that chipmakers were unable to include in the past due to reticle size limits and the high cost of scaling everything to the latest process node. This has opened the door to new architectures, new materials such as glass substrates, and a variety of new challenges. Dick Otte, president and CEO of Promex I... » read more