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1.2.1 e‐Manufacturing

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Since market competition in the consumer electronics industry has intensified, short product lifecycle becomes essential. A company that generates innovative research and development can garner market share. The rapid development of the information and Internet technologies facilitates the computerization of the intra‐company manufacturing execution system (MES) [1–3] and equipment engineering system (EES) [4–5], as well as expedites the networking of the inter‐company supply chain (SC) [6–8] and engineering chain (EC) [9–11] to move toward a global business model of e‐Manufacturing [12–13].

National Coalition for Advanced Manufacturing (NACFAM) [12] stated in 2001 that in the e‐Manufacturing era, companies will be able to exchange information of all types with their suppliers at the speed of light. Also, design cycle times and intercompany costs of manufacturing complex products will implode. Information on design flows will be instantly transmitted from repair shops to manufacturers and their supply chains.

Figure 1.1 shows the e‐Manufacturing hierarchy created by the international SEMATECH (ISMT) [4]. This hierarchy can be divided into the manufacturing portion and the engineering portion. In Figure 1.1, MES is a core system in the manufacturing portion that connects its upper factory‐to‐factory modules and lower equipment modules to dominate the overall manufacturing management. The highest (company‐to‐company) layer in the manufacturing portion is mainly for the purpose of SC. On the other hand, EES takes charge of the engineering portion that deals with equipment health monitoring, real‐time quality control, and maintenance scheduling (e.g. e‐diagnostics [15, 16]).


Figure 1.1 ISMT e‐Manufacturing hierarchy.

Source: Reprinted with permission from Ref. [14]; © 2010 IEEE.

In the semiconductor manufacturing industry, Tag and Zhang [13] defined e‐Manufacturing as the complete electronic integration of all factory components using industry standards. This e‐Manufacturing model extends from equipment‐to‐equipment automation systems to the manufacturing execution system/yield management system/equipment engineering system (MES/YMS/EES) and to the enterprise resource planning (ERP).

The ISMT e‐Manufacturing hierarchy shown in Figure 1.1 [4] merely takes care of the functions of MES, EES, and SC without EC. Another model defined in [13] also takes the related functions of MES, EES, and SC into consideration only.

To consider all of the functions and applications of MES, SC, EES, and EC simultaneously, and enhance the integrity of e‐Manufacturing as shown in Figure 1.2, Cheng et al. [14] proposed an advanced e‐Manufacturing model that takes advantage of the information and Internet technologies to efficiently integrate the MES and EES within a company (intra‐company integration), and the SC and EC among member companies (inter‐company integration). With this advanced e‐Manufacturing model, the productivity and yield of a complete production platform can be improved (by MES), the overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) can be enhanced (by EES), the order‐to‐delivery (O2D) period can be reduced (by SC), and the time‐to‐market (T2M) can be shortened (by EC). Furthermore, the goal of improving agility, efficiency, and decision‐making for the entire semiconductor manufacturing processes can be reached.


Figure 1.2 Four key components for the advanced e‐Manufacturing model.

Source: Reprinted with permission from Ref. [14]; © 2010 IEEE.

In the advanced e‐Manufacturing model, both the MES and SC belong to the manufacturing portion, whereas the EES and EC are closely related to the engineering portion. The proposed e‐Manufacturing model fully integrates the four key components (MES, EES, SC, and EC) to enhance the globalization and competitiveness of the semiconductor industry. The definitions, missions, primary issues, and feasible implementation frameworks of the four key components of e‐Manufacturing are discussed in the following sections.

Industry 4.1

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