Case Studies on the Application of Silicone Rubber Heaters in Semiconductor and LED Equipment
Product Overview and Technical Features
Silicone rubber heaters are thin, flexible electric heating elements manufactured by embedding nickel-chromium alloy heating wires or etched metal foils into a composite insulating layer of silicone rubber and fiberglass cloth. Their standard thickness typically ranges from 1.0 mm to 1.5 mm. They operate within a temperature range of -55°C to 230°C, with some high-temperature variants capable of withstanding temperatures up to 250°C. Power density can be customized to meet specific application requirements. Silicone rubber offers excellent water resistance, moisture resistance, chemical corrosion resistance, and weather resistance and aging resistance.
As representative sectors of precision manufacturing, the semiconductor and LED industries impose nearly exacting requirements on temperature control components, demanding ultra-thin, flexible, clean, and highly precise temperature regulation. Leveraging the technical advantages of etched foil heating elements—including large contact area, excellent heat distribution uniformity, and rapid thermal response—silicone rubber heaters have become core components in the thermal management systems of semiconductor and LED equipment.
Key advantages include:
· Ultra-thin, flexible conforming: Silicone rubber offers high flexibility and can be as thin as approximately 1.0 mm. It conforms tightly to the complex geometries of semiconductor equipment—such as gas lines, wafer stages, and chamber walls—to achieve efficient heat transfer.
· Uniform and Efficient Heating: Utilizing etched alloy foil heating circuits significantly increases the contact area compared to traditional filament-based heating elements. The heating area is controllable, with minimal temperature differences between the edges and the center, greatly reducing process defects caused by uneven heating.
· Clean Compatibility (Silicon-Free Purification): Front-end semiconductor wafer processes (etching, CVD, lithography, etc.) are extremely sensitive to cleanliness; materials must not release siloxane-based volatiles at high temperatures that could contaminate wafers. For this application, specialized silicone rubber heaters must utilize silicone-free, non-volatile formulations and encapsulation processes. The heating process produces no particulate matter or harmful substance emissions, meeting Class 100 (ISO Class 5) cleanroom requirements.
· Precise Temperature Control: Can be equipped with built-in K-type, J-type thermocouples, or PT100 temperature sensors, which, when paired with a PID temperature controller, enable precise closed-loop temperature control, limiting temperature fluctuations at critical workstations to within ±1°C or even ±0.5°C.
· Environmental Resistance: Silicone rubber is waterproof, corrosion-resistant, and resistant to vibration-induced cracking, ensuring long-term reliable operation in harsh environments such as those with high humidity or chemical vapors.
· High Safety: With a breakdown voltage of up to 1000–1500 V AC/min and an insulation resistance of ≥100 MΩ, it meets electrical safety standards for high-voltage equipment.
Silicone rubber heaters are thin, flexible electric heating elements manufactured by embedding nickel-chromium alloy heating wires or etched metal foils into a composite insulating layer of silicone rubber and fiberglass cloth. Their standard thickness typically ranges from 1.0 mm to 1.5 mm. They operate within a temperature range of -55°C to 230°C, with some high-temperature variants capable of withstanding temperatures up to 250°C. Power density can be customized to meet specific application requirements. Silicone rubber offers excellent water resistance, moisture resistance, chemical corrosion resistance, and weather resistance and aging resistance.
As representative sectors of precision manufacturing, the semiconductor and LED industries impose nearly exacting requirements on temperature control components, demanding ultra-thin, flexible, clean, and highly precise temperature regulation. Leveraging the technical advantages of etched foil heating elements—including large contact area, excellent heat distribution uniformity, and rapid thermal response—silicone rubber heaters have become core components in the thermal management systems of semiconductor and LED equipment.
Key advantages include:
· Ultra-thin, flexible conforming: Silicone rubber offers high flexibility and can be as thin as approximately 1.0 mm. It conforms tightly to the complex geometries of semiconductor equipment—such as gas lines, wafer stages, and chamber walls—to achieve efficient heat transfer.
· Uniform and Efficient Heating: Utilizing etched alloy foil heating circuits significantly increases the contact area compared to traditional filament-based heating elements. The heating area is controllable, with minimal temperature differences between the edges and the center, greatly reducing process defects caused by uneven heating.
· Clean Compatibility (Silicon-Free Purification): Front-end semiconductor wafer processes (etching, CVD, lithography, etc.) are extremely sensitive to cleanliness; materials must not release siloxane-based volatiles at high temperatures that could contaminate wafers. For this application, specialized silicone rubber heaters must utilize silicone-free, non-volatile formulations and encapsulation processes. The heating process produces no particulate matter or harmful substance emissions, meeting Class 100 (ISO Class 5) cleanroom requirements.
· Precise Temperature Control: Can be equipped with built-in K-type, J-type thermocouples, or PT100 temperature sensors, which, when paired with a PID temperature controller, enable precise closed-loop temperature control, limiting temperature fluctuations at critical workstations to within ±1°C or even ±0.5°C.
· Environmental Resistance: Silicone rubber is waterproof, corrosion-resistant, and resistant to vibration-induced cracking, ensuring long-term reliable operation in harsh environments such as those with high humidity or chemical vapors.
· High Safety: With a breakdown voltage of up to 1000–1500 V AC/min and an insulation resistance of ≥100 MΩ, it meets electrical safety standards for high-voltage equipment.
Case Study 1: Heat Tracing for Etching Machine Gas Lines—Precise Condensation Prevention and Stable Flow
Problem: A leading semiconductor manufacturer in Shanghai processes 8- and 12-inch wafers. The process gas delivery lines for its etching machines (fluorinated specialty gases such as CF₄, SF₆, and NF₃) have extremely small diameters (ranging from DN6 to DN12 mm) and feature a dense layout with numerous bends. The cleanroom requires the pipelines to be maintained at a precise and stable temperature of 85±2°C to prevent the condensation or liquefaction of these precision gases. In traditional heat tracing solutions, conventional heating tapes are too thick and lack flexibility, making it impossible to tightly conform to small-diameter pipes and elbows; heat transfer dead zones frequently cause localized condensation. Some heating tapes have excessively high power density, posing a risk of localized overheating, which not only accelerates pipe aging but may also trigger chemical instability in specialty gases. Furthermore, their insulation protection rating is insufficient to meet the electrical safety standards of semiconductor cleanrooms, and there is a risk of particulate matter shedding.
Solution: Utilize the Sakaguchi Electric SBH25 flexible silicone rubber belt heater (15 mm wide, 4.5 mm thick), which supports an ultra-wide temperature range of -50°C to 180°C and a minimum bending radius of 10 mm, in conjunction with the SBX-303 high-precision temperature controller (temperature control accuracy ±1.5°C). The heater is spirally wrapped along the axial direction of the piping** (with a wrapping pitch controlled within 5 mm), leaving a 1–2 mm allowance for flexible deformation at bends, and secured with food-grade aluminum foil thermal tape to eliminate thermal resistance caused by air gaps. The system employs dynamic PID logic control to prevent the condensation of specialty gases**.
Results: Temperature uniformity throughout the entire pipeline is maintained within ±3°C, and the issue of special gas condensation and liquefaction has been completely eliminated. Gas flow fluctuations in the etcher have been significantly reduced from ±5% to ±1%, wafer etching line width deviation is controlled within 0.02 μm, chip etching yield has increased by 2.5%, and equipment downtime caused by gas condensation has been reduced by approximately 80%.
Technical Highlights: The heater is made of silicone-free, non-volatile silicone rubber material, ensuring no dust or harmful substances are released during the heating process.
Problem: A leading semiconductor manufacturer in Shanghai processes 8- and 12-inch wafers. The process gas delivery lines for its etching machines (fluorinated specialty gases such as CF₄, SF₆, and NF₃) have extremely small diameters (ranging from DN6 to DN12 mm) and feature a dense layout with numerous bends. The cleanroom requires the pipelines to be maintained at a precise and stable temperature of 85±2°C to prevent the condensation or liquefaction of these precision gases. In traditional heat tracing solutions, conventional heating tapes are too thick and lack flexibility, making it impossible to tightly conform to small-diameter pipes and elbows; heat transfer dead zones frequently cause localized condensation. Some heating tapes have excessively high power density, posing a risk of localized overheating, which not only accelerates pipe aging but may also trigger chemical instability in specialty gases. Furthermore, their insulation protection rating is insufficient to meet the electrical safety standards of semiconductor cleanrooms, and there is a risk of particulate matter shedding.
Solution: Utilize the Sakaguchi Electric SBH25 flexible silicone rubber belt heater (15 mm wide, 4.5 mm thick), which supports an ultra-wide temperature range of -50°C to 180°C and a minimum bending radius of 10 mm, in conjunction with the SBX-303 high-precision temperature controller (temperature control accuracy ±1.5°C). The heater is spirally wrapped along the axial direction of the piping** (with a wrapping pitch controlled within 5 mm), leaving a 1–2 mm allowance for flexible deformation at bends, and secured with food-grade aluminum foil thermal tape to eliminate thermal resistance caused by air gaps. The system employs dynamic PID logic control to prevent the condensation of specialty gases**.
Results: Temperature uniformity throughout the entire pipeline is maintained within ±3°C, and the issue of special gas condensation and liquefaction has been completely eliminated. Gas flow fluctuations in the etcher have been significantly reduced from ±5% to ±1%, wafer etching line width deviation is controlled within 0.02 μm, chip etching yield has increased by 2.5%, and equipment downtime caused by gas condensation has been reduced by approximately 80%.
Technical Highlights: The heater is made of silicone-free, non-volatile silicone rubber material, ensuring no dust or harmful substances are released during the heating process.
Case Study 2: Intelligent Heater Control for Chamber Piping in Plasma Stripping and Etching Equipment
In plasma stripping machines and silicon carbide etching machines, the special gas delivery lines must be precisely maintained within a high-temperature range of 80–120°C. If the heating is insufficient, process gases such as nitrogen trifluoride (NF₃) and oxygen (O₂) are highly prone to condensing on the inner walls of the lines, which not only causes blockages but may also contaminate the reaction chamber. Long-term shutdowns and thermal cycling also frequently lead to fatigue failure in precision pipe fittings.
Solution: Sakaguchi Electric’s SBH250 silicone rubber tape heater (15 mm wide, 4.5 mm thick, 5 m long) is wrapped around the outer wall of the piping. With a minimum bending radius of just 10 mm, it perfectly adapts to complex piping configurations. A closed-loop temperature control system utilizing Sakaguchi thermocouples maintains the piping environment at a constant temperature (within ±1°C). Additionally, low-power heat preservation is maintained during equipment downtime.
Results: This system successfully meets the stringent manufacturing requirements for 150–300 mm wafers and third-generation semiconductor chips. It precisely eliminates the risk of gas condensation, preventing particle contamination in the chamber and improving etching yield by 2.3%. The system maintains heat retention during downtime to mitigate thermal expansion and contraction, extending the service life of critical precision components by 30%.
Technical Highlights: The heaters comply with semiconductor high-cleanliness environmental standards and do not release particles; they can be spiral-wound during installation without disassembling piping, increasing installation efficiency by 50%.
In plasma stripping machines and silicon carbide etching machines, the special gas delivery lines must be precisely maintained within a high-temperature range of 80–120°C. If the heating is insufficient, process gases such as nitrogen trifluoride (NF₃) and oxygen (O₂) are highly prone to condensing on the inner walls of the lines, which not only causes blockages but may also contaminate the reaction chamber. Long-term shutdowns and thermal cycling also frequently lead to fatigue failure in precision pipe fittings.
Solution: Sakaguchi Electric’s SBH250 silicone rubber tape heater (15 mm wide, 4.5 mm thick, 5 m long) is wrapped around the outer wall of the piping. With a minimum bending radius of just 10 mm, it perfectly adapts to complex piping configurations. A closed-loop temperature control system utilizing Sakaguchi thermocouples maintains the piping environment at a constant temperature (within ±1°C). Additionally, low-power heat preservation is maintained during equipment downtime.
Results: This system successfully meets the stringent manufacturing requirements for 150–300 mm wafers and third-generation semiconductor chips. It precisely eliminates the risk of gas condensation, preventing particle contamination in the chamber and improving etching yield by 2.3%. The system maintains heat retention during downtime to mitigate thermal expansion and contraction, extending the service life of critical precision components by 30%.
Technical Highlights: The heaters comply with semiconductor high-cleanliness environmental standards and do not release particles; they can be spiral-wound during installation without disassembling piping, increasing installation efficiency by 50%.
Case Study 3: Precision Heating of LED Encapsulation Nozzles—Ensuring Smooth and Consistent Adhesive Flow
Issue: The dispensing process for LED packaging has varying and highly sensitive operating temperature windows for different types of adhesives—epoxy at 80–120°C, silicone at 100–150°C, and fluorescent/hot-melt adhesives at 120–180°C. If the nozzle temperature fluctuates excessively or heats unevenly, the adhesive’s viscosity characteristics will change, leading to issues such as adhesive breakage, stringing, bubbles, or inconsistent dot diameters. This not only affects product consistency but may also cause splattered adhesive to damage fragile LED chips and gold wires, directly reducing the yield rate of the back-end packaging process. Additionally, since the packaging workshop operates under cleanroom conditions, the heater must have **minimal outgassing and be silicone- and halogen-free** to prevent contamination of wafers and adhesives.
Solution: The Sakaguchi Electric 125CH93A1X miniature coil nozzle heater (diameter: 3.1 mm, power density: 4.3 W/cm²) is embedded within the dispensing nozzle via a fully sealed SUS+TAG insulation structure. The effective heating zone is precisely aligned with the dispensing orifice, and in conjunction with a Type K thermocouple and PID temperature control system, it achieves stable temperature control within ±2°C. The system employs a step-by-step temperature ramp-up logic upon startup—first preheating at 40°C for 10 minutes, then gradually rising to the target temperature—to prevent instantaneous high temperatures from causing adhesive carbonization or thermal shock to the LEDs.
Results: Under continuous high-load production, adhesive dispensing remains smooth with no breaks, bubbles, or stringing. The diameter and height of the adhesive dots are consistent, resulting in a significant improvement in LED packaging yield. The stepwise heating strategy effectively reduces startup scrap rates while maximizing protection of the LED chips and substrates from thermal damage, thereby minimizing the risk of early failures such as hidden cracks in gold wires.
Issue: The dispensing process for LED packaging has varying and highly sensitive operating temperature windows for different types of adhesives—epoxy at 80–120°C, silicone at 100–150°C, and fluorescent/hot-melt adhesives at 120–180°C. If the nozzle temperature fluctuates excessively or heats unevenly, the adhesive’s viscosity characteristics will change, leading to issues such as adhesive breakage, stringing, bubbles, or inconsistent dot diameters. This not only affects product consistency but may also cause splattered adhesive to damage fragile LED chips and gold wires, directly reducing the yield rate of the back-end packaging process. Additionally, since the packaging workshop operates under cleanroom conditions, the heater must have **minimal outgassing and be silicone- and halogen-free** to prevent contamination of wafers and adhesives.
Solution: The Sakaguchi Electric 125CH93A1X miniature coil nozzle heater (diameter: 3.1 mm, power density: 4.3 W/cm²) is embedded within the dispensing nozzle via a fully sealed SUS+TAG insulation structure. The effective heating zone is precisely aligned with the dispensing orifice, and in conjunction with a Type K thermocouple and PID temperature control system, it achieves stable temperature control within ±2°C. The system employs a step-by-step temperature ramp-up logic upon startup—first preheating at 40°C for 10 minutes, then gradually rising to the target temperature—to prevent instantaneous high temperatures from causing adhesive carbonization or thermal shock to the LEDs.
Results: Under continuous high-load production, adhesive dispensing remains smooth with no breaks, bubbles, or stringing. The diameter and height of the adhesive dots are consistent, resulting in a significant improvement in LED packaging yield. The stepwise heating strategy effectively reduces startup scrap rates while maximizing protection of the LED chips and substrates from thermal damage, thereby minimizing the risk of early failures such as hidden cracks in gold wires.
