Glass Fiber Market in Electronics (2015)

Posted by zccyfiberglass on December 9th, 2015

Glass fiber as the most important material in the electronics for many years. Glass fiber/epoxy laminates have been the foundational structural substrate in printed circuit boards (PCBs) for decades. These iconic thin, green “cards” support the transistors, resistors and integrated circuits at the heart of almost all digital technologies and connect them electrically via conductive pathways etched or printed on their surfaces. They are the world’s largest market for glass fiber. Market research firm Lucintel (Dallas, TX, US) reports a global market for glass fiber in PCBs of almost 383,000 MT in 2013 and forecasts a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.5% that will reach nearly 500,000 MT by 2019. The growth will be fueled by the proliferation of mobile devices and digital control in appliances and cars, and new robotic applications in medical, defense and other manufacturing industries.

Glass/epoxy’s dominance, however, is under challenge as a variety of trends — notably, toward miniaturization, better thermal management, increased speed and performance, and the 3-D printing process — force PCB manufacturers to re-examine their material options. Will glass fiber composites meet tougher specifications as electronics development careens into unknown territory?

According to industry sources, the global PCB market grew from US billion in 2006 to a 2013 value of US billion, but the US share dropped from 15% to 5%, with 90% of PCBs now manufactured in Asia. North America still maintains a number of important technology players, including laminate producers Isola and Rogers Corp. (both in Chandler, AZ, US), and PCB producer TTM Technologies Inc. (Costa Mesa, CA, US), as well as a host of small prototyping and specialty fabricators.

Another emerging trend is the development of low-loss glass fiber to meet HDI board requirements. Lucintel cautions that PCBs are facing many challenges, among them, thermal fatigue and coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) mismatch. Consequently, glass fiber could come under attack as R&D programs seek materials that can provide the higher performance now demanded by device OEMs in almost all electronics market segments. To read more about the challenges that face composites in electronics applications, click on “Printed circuit boards: A mobile market,” under “Editor’s Picks,” at top right.

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zccyfiberglass
Joined: September 11th, 2015
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