MEMS Market

It is surprisingly difficult to find reliable numbers about the MEMS market in the Net. What one finds quite easily, however, are announcements of detailed studies about the MEMS market that you can buy for a price of several 1 000 $.
That makes it clear that some kind of MEMS "gold-rush" is happening right now. If you know where the nuggets are, you won't tell anybody but go for it yourself. If you can't do that, you try to sell your treasure map.
Nevertheless, here are a few numbers that seem to be trustworthy:
The worldwide MEMS systems market is expected to reach $ 95 · 109 by 2010.
If we look at the device market in 2005, we have the following numbers (partially calculated from other data):
Region Gross
109 $
%
USA 2,6 53
Japan 1,1 20
Europe 0.815 16
Singapore 0.45 11
S 4.22 100
Besides the market for the MEMS devices, there is a market for all the things you need to make MEMS devices.
You need machinery or equipment for the front-end and back-end process, and you need materials. Front-end means more or less everything going on in the clean room, back-end describes essentially the packaging of the raw chips - an often quite sophisticated process in MEMS technology.
Area Gross
106 $
Share
Front-end ? 53 %
Back-end ? 31 %
Materials » 270  
No numbers for the machinery, but 270 Mio $ is really money, too; and the gross for the equipment is certainly much higher.
Here is an overview from the "Silicon Technology I" script of Prof. Wagner, belonging to the Master Study course.
MEMS market
The discrepancy to the numbers above comes from unclear definitions: Are "RW" (reading and writing) heads included in the numbers above? Are we dicussing devices or systems? Are we discussing just the product market or also the "making MEMS" market?
Whatever. Two things are clear enough: There is a lot of money in MEMS, and it is a rapidly growing market.

The "Semicondcutor International" in March 2008 agrees: Below are some data concerning the MEMS sensor and actuator market.
MEMS market 2008
From IC Insights Inc. (Scottsdale, Ariz.) as published in the
Semiconductor International Newsbreak. March 26th 2008
Note that between "Units" and "Sales" we have roughly a factor of 3. There might be a mistake here: Units probably should not have the $ sign - it's just how many devices are made. If this is true, we see that a MEMS chip sells for about 3 $.
 
The message is loud and clear: The future belongs to MEMS (and Solar, and ...) - and that may be part of your future as materials scientist, too.
   

With frame With frame as PDF

go to 7.1.1 What is MEMS?

© H. Föll (Semiconductor Technology - Script)