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Which Plastics Work Best in Semiconductor Manufacturing Applications?

A closeup of the semiconductor wafer manufacturing process

Becca McCarthy, Semiconductor Specialist, answers the most common questions engineers and fabricators ask about performance plastics in semiconductor manufacturing, covering where these materials are used, which plastics perform best, and why material selection matters in contamination-sensitive environments.

Q: What role do performance plastics play in semiconductor manufacturing processes?

Performance plastics are used throughout wafer fabs because they combine chemical resistance, purity, dimensional stability, and ease of fabrication, all essential in contamination-sensitive environments.

Common semiconductor applications include:

  • Cabinets and equipment enclosures

  • Chemical tanks and wet benches

  • Windows and doors

  • Fume hoods and exhaust systems

  • Etching and rinse modules

  • Chemical dispensing systems

  • Test sockets and fixtures

  • Vacuum wand handles

  • Retaining rings and wafer spin chucks

  • Precision fasteners such as screws and pins

In many cases, these plastic components are exposed to aggressive acids, solvents, high temperatures, and constant automation cycles, making material performance non-negotiable.

Q: Which types of plastics are most commonly used in semiconductor applications?

Material selection depends heavily on where the component is used in the process (front-end vs. back-end) and the level of chemical exposure, purity, and mechanical stress involved.

Front-End Applications

High-Purity Systems (Wet Benches and Chemical Dispensing):

Wafer Processing and Handling:

Back-End Applications

Test Sockets and Precision Components:

  • Ultem® (PEI)

  • PEEK (various grades)

  • Torlon (PAI)

  • Polyimide (Vespel®)

Within test socket applications, even minor dimensional changes can lead to inaccurate results, making material stability critical.

Q: What advantages do these plastics offer in the semiconductor space?

Performance plastics deliver a combination of properties that metals and other materials often cannot match in semiconductor environments:

  • Excellent chemical resistance to aggressive acids and bases

  • High purity, minimizing contamination risk

  • Low flammability options, including FM4910-rated grades

  • High flexural modulus, vital for precision components

  • Dimensional stability, especially important for test socket applications requiring thin cross-sections and small hole patterns

  • Ease of machining and fabrication, including routing, bending, and forming

These advantages make plastics ideal for both custom-fabricated assemblies and high-volume production components used in wafer fabs.

Q: Which plastics provide the best chemical resistance against acids and solvents used in wafer processing?

Wafer processing involves frequent exposure to harsh chemicals, so material selection is crucial. Plastics with exceptional resistance to acids and solvents include PTFE (Teflon), ECTFE, PVDF (Kynar®), and PFA.

These materials are commonly used in chemical tanks, piping, wet benches, and etching systems, where long-term exposure to corrosive chemicals is unavoidable.

Q: How do performance plastics improve safety and reliability in semiconductor fabs?

Safety and uptime are critical factors in semiconductor manufacturing. A single material failure can cause contamination that ruins an entire batch of wafers, resulting in significant downtime and cost.

Plastics improve safety and reliability by:

  • Resisting corrosive acids and solvents, preventing material degradation

  • Reducing contamination risk in tanks and process equipment

  • Maintaining long-lasting performance over production cycles

  • Enabling automated wafer handling systems

FM4910-rated plastics further enhance safety by offering:

  • Fire resistance

  • Reduced smoke generation

  • Lower toxic gas emissions

These properties help minimize damage in case of fire, reduce downtime, and support warranty and insurance requirements inside wafer fabs.

Q: How are performance plastics helping to reduce energy consumption in semiconductor equipment?

Performance plastics are significantly lighter than metals, which helps reduce strain on robotic arms and automated handling systems, lowers energy consumption during repetitive motion, and improves overall system efficiency.

In large-scale wafer fabs operating around the clock, even small reductions in energy usage can translate into meaningful operational savings.

Q: What is a common pain point with plastics in the semiconductor industry, and how can Piedmont help?

One often-overlooked challenge is white color consistency. Different manufacturers use different white pigments, which can result in:

  • Mismatched panels

  • Visual inconsistency in windows and doors

  • Customer concerns about equipment performance

Inconsistent coloring can raise unnecessary red flags during inspections or audits. However, Piedmont Plastics works closely with customers to ensure:

  • Material procurement from a single manufacturer

  • Uniform appearance across complete systems

  • Access to the best material options available

By supplying consistent materials, Piedmont helps fabs maintain uniform, professional-looking systems without compromising performance.

Q: Where does Piedmont Plastics support semiconductor customers today?

Piedmont Plastics is dedicated to supporting high-purity semiconductor applications, particularly in wet benches, tanks, doors and windows, cabinets, and chemical dispensing systems.

We stock materials such as:

  • PVC (Type 1, FM4910 & blue tint)

  • Polypropylene (Standard & FM4910)

  • PVDF

  • Other high-purity performance plastics

This local availability helps reduce lead times and keeps critical projects moving without disruption. Whether you’re evaluating materials for a new system or upgrading existing equipment, Piedmont Plastics is here to help.

Contact us to learn more about our material availability, fabrication capabilities, and application-specific support for semiconductor manufacturing environments!

Author:

Becca McCarthy - Semiconductor Specialist

A specialist in the plastics industry since 2015, Becca brings strong knowledge of performance plastics and custom plastic solutions. She has always supported the semiconductor market and recently took a hyper-focused approach to the industry, allowing her to better serve its unique material and application demands.