GaN power management chips 'attractive market opportunity' for suppliers
1 min read
The Gallium Nitride (GaN) power management semiconductor market is expected to reach $183.6million in revenue by 2013, up from virtually nil in 2010, according to market analyst iSuppli.
According to iSupplie analyst, Marijana Vukicevic, events over the past two years have allowed the technology to reach its potential. The primary push has been the rapid growth in the high end server, notebook, mobile handset and wired communication segments.
Vukicevic said: "GaN is an emerging process technology for power management chips that recently moved beyond the university based testing phase and into the commercialisation stage. The technology represents an attractive market opportunity for suppliers by providing their customers with capabilities that may be out of the reach of present semiconductor process materials."
iSuppli believes that during the past two years, several events have occurred that have made GaN an up-and-coming star in the power management semiconductor world. Vukicevic continued: "First, the use of silicon has reached its practical limits in power management semiconductors. Furthermore, there have been major breakthroughs in growing GaN layers on silicon. Power designers also want to develop more efficient systems and to update their high voltage products to waste less electricity."
According to iSuppli, a number of component suppliers have begun offering GaN parts and the adoption of such devices will be driven by the improved efficiency and small form factors enabled by the material. Such benefits are in particularly high demand for portable electronic products as well as power hungry electronic equipment, such as enterprise servers and wired communications infrastructure gear.
However, iSuppli warns that adoption of GaN technology for these applications in 2010 and 2011 will be slow due to the high cost of parts using the material. Vukicevic noted: "As the technology advances and the cost of manufacturing GaN technology drops in 2012 and 2013, the technology will begin to steal market share away from conventional mosfets, driver ics and voltage regulator ics.
"The first adoption of GaN devices most likely will be among servers, which always demand high performance devices and often are one of the first product areas to accept new technologies that improve performance. Over the next three years, the bulk of device volume likely will be driven by notebooks, as the power savings and smaller form factor delivered by GaN will be in high demand."