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ON Semiconductor

Fairchild Semiconductor

Fairchild Semiconductor – Semiconductor Industry Pioneer.

Fairchild Semiconductor is currently a part of ON Semiconductor and has a long history of being a semiconductor industry pioneer. The company specialises in researching and manufacturing a full range of low to high-power technologies for the cellular, industrial, automotive, cloud, lighting, and computer industries.

About The Company

American semiconductor manufacturer Fairchild Semiconductor has its headquarters in California. It was a pioneer in producing transistors and integrated circuits after being established in 1957 as a Fairchild Camera and Instrument unit. Schlumberger acquired the business in 1979 and subsequently sold it to National Semiconductor. Fairchild was once more spun off as a separate company in 1997. In 2016, the company was purchased by ON Semiconductor.

Fairchild Semiconductor
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History

Fairchild Semiconductor International was established in 1957 as one of the first companies to develop integrated circuits and transistors effectively. Its research and production centres were spread across the United States and Asia. When eight engineers from the California-based Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory collectively left in 1957 over founder and transistor inventor William Shockley’s management style, Fairchild Camera and Instrument Corporation considered going into the semiconductor market. The group, known by Shockley as the “traitorous eight,” introduced themselves to Fairchild under the leadership of Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce. As a stake in the project, each of these eight engineers agreed to invest $500 of his own money. Each of the eight received $250,000 when they subsequently sold their holdings to Fairchild. The company’s first product was silicon-based transistors for military and industrial applications. Jean Hoerni, an engineer, realised that the product contamination could be lessened by putting a silicon-oxide coating. Noyce advanced Hoerni’s progress. Noyce developed the process for creating an integrated circuit. Although Fairchild submitted a patent application for this planar technique in 1959, the firms fought in the courts until a split ruling was reached ten years later. During this time, Fairchild cross-licensed the integrated circuit patents with the co-inventor Texas Instruments.

In contrast to Texas Instruments, Robert Noyce did not employ military money to create the business’s original manufacturing processes. At the cost of $120 per chip, Fairchild introduced the integrated circuit (IC) to the market in 1961. But at that time, any electronics company could build identical circuits for much less money by wiring high-end transistors together. For a customer to purchase ICs, there had to be a severe space restriction. Interestingly for Fairchild, the IC provided a solution to a similar issue that the American space programme faced. Around one million silicon chips had been acquired by the Apollo programme alone by 1969, with a sizable portion coming from Fairchild.

Acquisition

When Noyce and Moore left Fairchild Semiconductor in 1968 to establish Intel Corporation, dozens of new electronics businesses, such as Advanced Micro Devices, National Semiconductor Corporation, and LSI Logic Corporation, had already been established in the area, which is now referred to as Silicon Valley. Fairchild-related businesses were commonly called Fairchildren. By the late 1970s, Fairchild had lost its ability to rival the Fairchildren. The company and its former name were acquired by Schlumberger Limited in 1979, a French business best recognised for providing services and equipment to the oil industry. After less than ten years, Schlumberger tried to sell the company to the Japanese company Fujitsu Limited. After the USA government blocked the transaction, National Semiconductor bought Fairchild in 1987 but failed to make a profit from it either. Fairchild was separated from National in 1996 and established as a separate company with its headquarters in South Portland, Maine, where it had been running the semiconductor fabrication facility with the longest continuous operation in the world. Additionally, Fairchild produced integrated circuits(IC) for consumer technology in South Korea, Utah, and California, with facilities for assembly and testing in Malaysia and the Philippines. ON Semiconductor purchased Fairchild in 2016.

Founder – Sherman Fairchild, Arthur Rock

Sherman Fairchild, the founder of the Fairchild Camera and Instrument Corporation, was approached by Arthur Rock. He convinced Fairchild to recruit the team, known as “The Traitorous Eight”, and allow them to establish Fairchild Semiconductor. The group received a $1.5 million start-up loan from Fairchild.

CEO – Mark Thompson

Mark Thompson has served as the CEO and President of Fairchild since 2005 after joining the company in 2004 as EVP of its technology and manufacturing division. Previously served as the CEO of Big Bear Networks, vice president and general manager of Tyco Electronics’ power components division, and Raychem Electronics OEM vice president.

ON Semiconductor

ON Semiconductor – The Most Trustworthy Semiconductor Supplier.

ON Semiconductor is one of the few semiconductor distributors in Fortune 500, but it has been relegated to Fortune 1000(512) in 2020, according to recent news. In North America, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific, ON Semiconductor operates a broad network of production facilities. They also operate sales and layout center communities. The headquarters of ON Semiconductors is in Phoenix, Arizona. It is a worldwide leader in semiconductor sales of $3,907 billion (2016).

The Establishment Of ON Semiconductor


In 1999, ON Semiconductor was founded. The company started out in the Semiconductor Components Group of Motorola as the byproduct. Motorola’s discreet, standard analog, and standard logical devices are still produced. The acquisition of Cherry Semiconductor by ON Semiconductors was completed in April 2000. ON Semiconductor acquired AMI Semiconductor in March 2008 at a cost of $915 million. The purchase of Catalyst Semiconductor Inc. by the ON Semiconductor Corporation for $115 million on July 17, 2008, has been announced by On Semiconductor Corporations, Inc. The purchase approval was announced on 9 October 2008 by Catalyst Semiconductor, Inc. The purchase was completed on 10th October 2008 by ON Semiconductor Corporation. ON Semiconductor completed its $17M purchase in November 2009. In July of 2014 (including the settlement of a grant offer for foundries and a permanent agreement whereby ON Semiconductors is a 10 percent partner of Fujitsu’s 8-inch wafer fabric in Aizu-Wakamatsu, Japan) ON Semiconductors and Fujitsu Semiconductor announced a Strategic Partnership. In April 2019, ON Semiconductors acquired the 300 mm manufacturing facility of GlobalFoundries in East Fishkill, New York.

ON Semiconductor
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ON Semiconductors Products


In conjunction with digital signal processors, FM receivers, extension controllers, and modulators, ON Semiconductors supplies application-precision Standard Products (ASSP). In addition, they provide a wide range of Digital Signal Processor (DSP) hearing aid structures. The ON Semiconductors HCT CMOS logic family works with 2 to 6 V Vcc, and ESD safety over 3 company standards (HBM, MM, CDM). Inputs compatible with TTL are included in the HCT logic family. The limited portfolio of Fast Switch Technology (FST) switches comes from ON Semiconductor. The ON Semiconductor Bipolar Metal Gate Family has a Vcc-spectrum of 3 to 18 V, work temperature range between -55 to +125 C, and latch-up immunity greater than 500 mA. ON Semiconductor’s VHCT CMOS logic family runs at 2.0 to 5.5 V Vcc and shows delays in propagation of just 3.8 ns. TTL compatible inputs are available in the VHCT logic family. The ON Semiconductors ACT CMOS logic family has a power current of 24 mA and Vcc operates from 3.0 to 5.5 V. The TTL-compatible inputs in the ACT logic family. ON Semiconductor’s AC CMOS logical family has a powerful cutting-edge of 24 mA and Vcc range of 3.0 to 5.5 V. ON Semiconductors supplies a number of 1-gate and 2-gate MiniGate standard logic devices, in superior micro-packages.


Hassane El-Khoury, The CEO


Hassane El-Khoury was appointed as ON Semiconductor and Semiconductor Components Industries, LLC’s president and chief executive officer in December 2020. In the meantime, El-Khoury was President, Chief Executive Officer, and a member of Cypress Semiconductor’s Board of Directors until it was sold to Infineon in April 2020, before becoming an officer of ON Semiconductor.
For 13 years at Cypress, he played numerous roles in the control of business units, product improvement, program engineering, and business improvement. Mr. El-Khoury began his profession as a senior design engineer at Continental Automotive Systems. After moving to the United States from Lebanon, El-Khoury graduated from Lawrence Technological University with a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in engineering from Oakland University. He was awarded a Silicon Valley 40 under the age of 40 in 2018 and is now a member of the KeraCel board.


Sherman Fairchild Arthur Rock, The Founder


Rock was born in Rochester, New York, in a Jewish family. He was an only child and his father owned a small sweet keep wherein Rock labored as a youth. He graduated from the University of Syracuse in 1948 with a B.A. from Harvard Business School and received his MA in Business Management in 1951.
Based out of Silicon Valley, California, he was an early investor in most important companies which include Intel, Apple Computer, Scientific Data Systems, and Teledyne. He joined the United States Army all through World World War II however the battle ended earlier than he was deployed. He then went to university at the G.I. Bill. Rock commenced his profession in 1951 as a securities analyst in New York City, after which joined the company finance branch of Hayden, Stone & Company in New York, wherein he centered on raising cash for small high-technology companies.