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THREE-FIVE
SYSTEMS BUILDS MICRODISPLAYS ON UMC'S UNIQUE LIQUID CRYSTAL ON SILICON
(LCoS) SEMICONDUCTOR PROCESS
Foundry Enables
Microdisplay Providers to Deliver Cutting-Edge High Definition Television
(HDTV) Components
SUNNYVALE, Calif.,
February 12, 2001--UMC (NYSE: UMC), a world leading semiconductor
foundry, today announced that Three-Five Systems, Inc., (NYSE: TFS),
a U.S.-based designer and manufacturer of custom Liquid Crystal
Display (LCD) products and an industry leader in LCoS microdisplay
technology, is developing its newest microdisplays utilizing UMC's
LCoS backplane manufacturing process. Three-Five is utilizing UMC's
factories to produce the silicon required for its MD1024 Extended
Graphics Array (XGA) microdisplay for lightweight and portable front
projection applications, its MD1280 SXGA microdisplay for monitors,
high definition television and high resolution projectors, and its
specialized WUXGA microdisplay, the MD1920, for the most advanced
applications.
"UMC is
poised to be the premier manufacturer of LCoS wafers for the HDTV,
image projection and handheld device markets, as it is the foundry
industry's only provider of an LCoS technology process," said
Jim Ballingall, vice president of worldwide marketing for UMC. "We
are enabling leading developers of microdisplay technology to get
the benefits of high-resolution, high reflectance, and extremely-small
pixel sizes. The fact that Three-Five Systems is utilizing our process
for the development of its leading XGA, SXGA, and highest resolution
microdisplays means the company's products will benefit from a bright,
less pixilated image. Moreover, it also points to the fact that
UMC is delivering the cutting-edge technology that today's display
companies require."
Russell Flack,
senior director of microdisplay engineering for Three-Five Systems,
Inc. said, "As a leading provider of cutting-edge LCoS microdisplays,
we must adhere to the strictest of quality standards. We selected
UMC because of its proven track record for providing the most leading-edge
technology solutions. UMC has met and exceeded our expectations
for turnaround time and the fidelity of its technology. We are impressed
with the foundry's ability to support the highest performance required
by our most advanced customers and have experienced faster time-to-market
for our products. "
The LCoS microdisplay
backplanes to be made by UMC represent the most recent design work
in Three-Five's microdisplay technology portfolio. Design enhancements,
completed over the past several months at the company's Tempe, Arizona
research and development laboratory, have resulted in microdisplays
with increased reflectivity, contrast, and overall image uniformity.
Three-Five expects that this upgraded design, combined with UMC's
manufacturing strength, will produce brighter, more colorful and
uniform images for projection (multi-media projectors, televisions,
and monitors) and near-to-the-eye (Internet appliances and headsets)
display applications.
Charles W. McLaughlin
of McLaughlin Consulting Group, a market research firm based in
Menlo Park, California, commented, "During the past decade
the dramatic growth of the multimedia projector market has driven
the sales of microdisplays to more than $1 billion annually. During
the next five years, demand for microdisplay-based rear-projection,
large-format, digital televisions and desktop monitors will become
the high growth segment of the microdisplay projection market. But
the next decade will really give rise to the maturation of personal
display opportunities. Sales of personal display microdisplays used
in viewfinders and headsets and embedded in Internet appliances
will grow to $1.5 billion by 2005, becoming a substantial segment
of the $5.6 billion total microdisplay market."
About UMC's
LCoS Process
UMC's LCoS process
technology is an enhancement of its generic, mixed-mode CMOS process.
Developers of High Definition TV (HDTV), multi-media image projectors,
and handheld devices can implement this technology to devise microdisplays,
or small, display panels. Microdisplay products are physically smaller
(involving flat panel displays) than those that employ the alternative
Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) solution employed for the display screen
in a typical TV. UMC's LCoS process is capable of supporting extremely
small pixel sizes and thus supports the very high resolutions found
in Extended Graphics Array (XGA) (1024 X 768), Super XGA (1280 X
1024), and WUXGA (1920 X 1200) devices. UMC is currently the only
foundry to offer a LCoS process.
UMC's LCoS microdisplay
process comes equipped with a highly-reflective mirror layer, a
film of aluminum that covers the silicon wafer, that is essential
for achieving the desired resolution and brightness for a display.
UMC has integrated a Reflectance Enhancement Passivation layer over
the reflective aluminum layer, which counteracts the inhibiting
effects that the silicon normally has on reflectivity and allows
for high reflectance. The foundry's LCoS process uses Inter Metal
Dielectric (IMD) planarity, post spacer, and Gap Fill, all of which
flatten the die so as to maximize the yield of liquid-crystal assembly.
UMC's process has enabled microdisplay developers to achieve extremely
narrow pixels for enhanced reflectivity and brightness.
About Three-Five
Systems, Inc.R
Three-Five Systems,
Inc. is a recognized leader in the design and manufacture of liquid
crystal display (LCD) modules and technology for OEM customers in
wireless communications and data collection, medical electronics,
and other commercial and consumer device marketplaces. The company
has developed proprietary LCD products, such as LCiD?, a sunlight
readable display. In addition to traditional LCDs, the company is
developing other display technologies such as LCoS? (Liquid Crystal
on Silicon) microdisplays, tiny, high resolution, low power displays
designed for new markets such as HDTV, business projectors and wireless
Internet appliances. At its Tempe, Arizona headquarters, Three-Five
operates the highest volume LCD manufacturing line in North America
and houses the David R. Buchanan LCD laboratory, dedicated to the
development of advanced display technologies. The company's web
site is located at www.threefive.com.
Note Concerning
Forward-Looking Statements
Some of the
statements in the foregoing announcement are forward looking within
the meaning of the U.S. Federal Securities laws, including statements
about future outsourcing, wafer capacity, technologies, business
relationships and market conditions. Investors are cautioned that
actual events and results could differ materially from these statements
as a result of a variety of factors, including conditions in the
overall semiconductor market and economy; acceptance and demand
for products from any of the aforementioned companies; and technological
and development risks.
Editorial
Contacts:
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In the
USA:
KJ Communications
Eileen Elam
(650) 917-1488
KjcomE@cs.com
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In
Taiwan
UMC
Alex Hinnawi
(886)2-2700-6999 ext.6958
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Three-Five
Systems, Inc.
Elizabeth Sharp
(602) 389-8837 |
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