VLSI Market in India
India was projected as a software super power,But it has now set its
sights on becoming an all-round IT super source as India’s hardware
design engineers join hands with their software developer brethren.
IC Design in India
Perhaps
the most important event that has occurred in the area of design has
been the arrival of Texas Instruments in India in 1986 to develop CAD
products for IC design. Then it got ambitious. Today, designs in
application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), linear ICs and
application specific memories account for an important part of the
products that Texas Instruments ships from its Bangalore base. Before
the MNCs ventured into this field, the development activity was
restricted to the government sector. Projects involving design of ICs,
specially ASICs, had been set up by Department of Electronics (DoE) at
IIT Centres (Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Kharagpur), Indian Institute of
Science (Bangalore), Jadavpur University (Calcutta) and Central
Electrical Engineering Research University (Pilani). Since then over 80
different types of ASICs have been designed and supplied to the
customers by DoE centres at Bangalore, Noida, Chennai, Hyderabad,
Bhubaneshwar, Pune, Thiruvanan-thapuram and New Delhi. The centres at
Bangalore and Noida are being operated by Semiconductor Complex Limited
(SCL) on behalf of DoE. Among other public sector companies involved in
the effort of designing chips are Bharat Electronics Limited and ITI.
It was, however, Texas Instruments’ enterprise that brought other MNCs
like SGS Thomson and Cadence into the country.
MNCs in India
What
has made India the design hub, according to some in the industry, is
the saving of 33 per cent to 50 per cent in engineering costs. However,
there are others who believe that no matter now dramatic these savings
may seem, such considerations do not percolate down to the street price
of the chip. Finally, the net price of a chip designed in India will be
no different from another coming out of a design shop in the Silicon
Valley of USA. The question that remains then is, ‘What attracts the
MNCs to India?’ The answer, according to experts, is that it is a
lot easier to build a team in India, and when you give customers a
product ahead of time, they are prepared to pay a premium for it. The
other reasons are the potential market that is expected to come up in
the next five years in India and the proximity to the high chip
consuming industry in the Asia Pacific region.
Other players in the
region are Arcus Technology, SAS, DCM and Usha Matra. The close
relation of software with chip designing is what makes the situation
ideal for India-situated design companies. The development of a
semiconductor chip based VLSI (very large scale integrated circuit)
requires an enormous development of software. This is where India has a
marked edge over other developing countries.
Another factor that
has aided designing has been the availability of electronic design
software and design automation. This assistance is offered by companies
like Apara Design Automation, Wipro Infotech, Digipro Design
Automation, Future Techno Designs Pte Ltd, NIIT, Usha Matra etc.
Among
the public sector undertakings, Indian Telephone Industries had, by the
mid-1990s, set up a tiny 200 wafer-a-week, 10cm (4-inch), 3-micron fab
for ASIC production, and has since made significant headway over the
years. Bharat Electronics Ltd branched away from its traditional
defence focus earlier this decade and is an important volume producer
of ICs. It signed on SGS Thomson Microelectronics to help boost its
fabrication output from 15 million to 100 million units using the 15cm
(6-inch) wafer and 1.5-micron technology, and has been graduating from
strength to strength since then.
The private sector achievements
read like a book of records in electronics. Texas Instruments India,
like many multinational subsidiaries in the country, has invested
heavily in VLSI facilities. Its centre for design is one of the largest
in the world. It recently designed a completely Indian core chip called
Ankoor. It is the first US company to have designed a core processor (a
chip loaded with software) completely in India. As far as memory chips
are concerned, the first full-chip memory design for 4M DRAM in India
was completed as early as 1993. An 8M flash memory chip has also been
designed in India.
Motorola’s Bangalore design centre has designed
some chips for the Iridium project. It is now designing chips for
Teledesic, the satellite communications company in which Bill Gates,
Craig Mc Caw, Motorola and Boeing have equity stakes. IBM’s centre
develops ASIC chips for IBM products that are manufactured in
fabrication centres abroad. Its ASIC centre at Bangalore is among the
twelve across the world to have the capability of designing a complete
processor. IBM has complete skills in VLSI, planner design, electronic
design automation software and firmware. The hardware/VLSI team’s
service is focussed on front-end design, functional verification, model
development and library development. Wipro Infotech has designed a
full-fledged networking ATM system for local and wide areas, an IEEEB
94 link chip and a cash-control system for a client in the US. It also
provides hardware and ASIC design, operating systems like UNIX, NT,
non-stop kernel, device drivers, middleware for distributed computing,
UNIX/NT interoperability tools and embedded systems. Aside from the
ability to design ASICs from concept to silicon, it has the ability to
design multiprocessor systems and other hardware for high-speed
switches and adaptors. Wipro specialises in hardware
(ASIC/board/system) design with extensive use of hardware design
languages, synthesis and simulation tools using either Verilog, VDHL or
schematic entry as the front-end. Wipro has a lot to show in terms of
experience with synthesis and simulation tools like Synopsis and
industry-standard tools like motive-to-design arrays or standard cells
for different ASIC foundaries. DCM Data Systems, pioneer in this field,
has developed chips for ISRO and Defence Research Development
Organisation. Now it is designing chips for a cellular company. It has
also designed a chip that extends the capability of a
peripheral-connecting device in a computer and is now discussing
possibilities with a few computer manufacturers. DCM is also producing
chips for mobile communications, functional programming languages and
computer architecture. These designs are active in ASICs. Among the
company’s ASIC/PPGA design tools, the significant ones are the VDHL
system simulator, DC Expert, FPGA Compiler, PCI Bus Interface Models,
Vantage Simulator, Cadence Verilog X: Simulator Altera Max+II,
PLSM-VDHL and PLS-MAGNUM.
TVSE designs chips and electronics for
peripherals, and is perhaps one of the few successful hardware
exporters in the country today. In addition to these companies there
are small start-ups which are sometimes able to obtain subcontracts
from companies like IBM. Nevertheless, there are new stalwarts like
Arcus Technology which started in 1990 with gate array for telecom
requirements of ITI. Arcus soon matured to be able to attract and
tackle large-sized, state-of-the-art design projects. These include
challenging, full-custom chips for instrumentation applications on the
one hand and highly complex SDH chip design on the other. Arcus
supports a few EDA tool vendors to promote their products in India and
also promote the VLSI design culture and capabilities. Arcus had
already completed almost 20 ASICs by 1994 and had proven its design
capabilities in various application areas in contemporary technologies.
Arcus successfully executed the SDH mapper project which had
approximately a 250,000-gate complexity and was the largest ASIC in
Asia. In 1995 Arcus won two more contracts from major Korean
semiconductor companies. Arcus also licensed key analogue design and
technology to a Korean semiconductor company. This was probably the
first time any Indian company had licensed technology to a foreign
company in the area of VLSI. Today Arcus has completed almost 50 ASICs
and over 10 design projects including technology and product licensing
to Korean, European and American companies. Godrej and Boyce Mfg. Co.
Ltd specialises in the design and development of
microprocessor/microcontroller based electronics. Synopsys India Pvt
Ltd is the largest R&D centre ouside the US engaged in the
development of the fastest Verilog simulator VCS and VHDL simulator
VSS. Synopsys India specialises in the development of leading edge EDA
software products to be used for solving the problems of
next-generation hardware designs as well as for providing
state-of-the-art design methodologies and consulting services. The
presence of software developers as well as design engineers in the
facility provides a unique opportunity for close interaction between
software developers and end-users of the products. Another company,
U&I Scotty Computers Pvt Ltd, has immense talents in the field of
ASIC design and development. Its products include a high-end RSIC
processor. Bangalore based N-Core Technology, apart from marketing
Yantra, its lightweight multimedia laptop PC, has also moved focus on
marketing its hardware design skills internationally. The company had
announced in 1996 that it would focus on the design of digital signal
processor based systems and ASICs.
VLSI in Communications
There
has been a spurt in VLSI devices over the last 15 years as a result of
the growth in mobile communication systems which enabled a person to
communicate with anyone from anywhere at any time. Mobile communication
is now almost in the third generation stage with the introduction of
data services along with voice and intelligent network control. It is
projected to arrive at the fourth generation by year 2000 by when
multimedia services would also be included. VLSI technology will be
propelled by wireless and multimedia communications for the next 10
years, which will give the Indian VLSI/ASIC designing industry a
fillip. Perhaps this will give a boost to fabrication facilities in
India. So far the fabrication has been miniscule. Most in the industry
are not optimistic since the seed capital for setting up an IC
fabrication plant is prohibitively expensive for any potential investor
in the country. But with faster than expected growth in wireless and
multimedia communications, it may prove more feasible. It is true that
even ten years back no one could imagine India producing VLSI design.
Government’s Initiatives
Even
the government sector has not lagged behind in terms of involvement
with higher technology. Over 80 different types of ASICs have been
designed and supplied to customers by DoE. The department has 26
projects on VLSI, involving an outlay of about Rs 160 million, to keep
pace with the development. Much more manpower will be required in the
future.
The DoE has announced a special manpower development for
VLSI design to develop infrastructure for this industry. The objective
of the programme is to make India a major VLSI design testing and
application development destination globally and to catalyse an
increase in India’s share of the global market from the current level
of 0.5 per cent to 5 per cent by the end of the Ninth Plan. The basic
philosophy behind the programme is for the government to play the role
of a catalyst and infrastructure provider. The key ingredients of the
government inputs for this area are: development of trained manpower,
nurturing of a few institutions of excellence in CAD of LSI/VLSI,
promoting and projecting India’s strength.
The Ninth Plan Study Team
on Microelectronics has recommended development of specialised manpower
at BE/B. Tech, ME/M. Tech and Ph. D levels, development of specialised
knowledge centres, silicon siliconisation of the designs through an
India Chip Programme and promotional efforts to market India as a
global destination for VLSI design.
A few MNCs have begun to
provide vital support to institutions in terms of expertise and
instituting fellowships. India may soon emerge as strongly in design as
it has in software development.
Worldwide VLSI Market forecast
IC
Insights has raised its 2008 IC unit volume forecast. The market
research company now expects IC unit volumes to increase 9% in 2008, to
170.5 billion units, up 1% from its mid-year update. "Moreover, there
is a good chance that IC unit volumes could increase 10% this year,
which would make 2008 a record seventh year in a row of double-digit
unit volume growth," IC Insights reported.
Although unit volumes
are on the up, IC Insights said the adjustment to its 2008 growth rate
forecast came about primarily due to price degradation. The company
reported it now expects a 4% dip in ASPs (average selling prices) for
2008 as compared to 2007 ASPs.

Meanwhile, IC Insights is holding steady on its 2009, 2010, 2011, and
2012 IC market growth rate forecasts of 8%, 11%, 13%, and 16% growth
respectively. The company said that while lower worldwide GDP growth in
2009 as compared to 2008 might serve to reduce IC unit volume growth to
only 7 to 8% next year, the large capital spending cutbacks for IC
production this year are forecast to stabilize IC ASPs in 2009.
Conclusion
The design opportunity, according to MAIT (Manufacturers’
Association of Information Technology), covers the entire gamut of the
information technology industry. For instance, India is already, though
in a small way, an important centre for chip design. The design work is
completed in India and the manufacture takes place overseas. The
potential in the area of chip design is what would primarily give India
a very sharp edge in worldwide market.
Reference : http://vlsimarketinindia.blogspot.com/