Chip packaging has been dominated by organic substrates — fiberglass-reinforced epoxy composites — since the 1990s. Now, glass is emerging as a serious alternative, driven by the thermal and mechanical demands of AI hardware.
According to the report, Absolics, a South Korean company, has completed construction of a dedicated glass substrate factory in the United States and plans to begin commercial manufacturing this year. Intel is simultaneously working to incorporate glass into its next-generation chip packages, with its research pulling other companies in the packaging supply chain along with it. South Korean and Chinese firms are among the early adopters of the approach.
The core problem glass addresses is warpage. As AI workloads intensify and chip packages grow larger, the heat generated by high-performance chips physically distorts the organic substrates beneath them, causing component misalignment, cooling inefficiency, and premature hardware failure. Deepak Kulkarni, a senior fellow at Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), describes warpage as “one of the most fundamental” mechanical constraints now facing the industry.
What Glass Changes
Glass handles heat more predictably than organic substrates, which undergo unpredictable shrinkage and distortion through heating and cooling cycles. Rahul Manepalli, vice president of advanced packaging at Intel, says the thermal stability of glass could allow engineers to create 10 times more connections per millimeter compared to organic substrates. That connection density, in turn, allows Intel designers to fit 50% more silicon chips into the same package area. The denser wiring also enables more efficient power delivery routing, and glass’s superior heat dissipation reduces overall power consumption at the chip level.
Manepalli notes that Intel recognized the limitations of organic substrates roughly a decade ago. The company says it wants to be among the first to bring glass-based packaging to production. If manufacturing costs fall sufficiently, the same technology could extend to consumer laptops and mobile devices.
A Stronger Ecosystem This Time
Bilal Hachemi, a senior technology and market analyst at Yole Group, places the current push in historical context: glass has been attempted in semiconductor packaging before, but he says “the ecosystem is more solid and wider” now, and “the need for glass-based [technology] is sharper.”
That ecosystem maturity matters because glass introduces its own engineering difficulties. The substrate panels used in data center chip packages measure only approximately 700 micrometers to 1.4 millimeters in thickness, leaving them susceptible to cracking or shattering during manufacturing and handling — a materials challenge that organic substrates, for all their thermal shortcomings, do not pose at the same scale.
The industry’s direction appears set. Structural limitations of organic substrates are well-documented, commercial infrastructure for glass alternatives is coming online, and leading chip designers are publicly committed to the transition. The outstanding variable is whether manufacturing processes can tame glass’s fragility at the volumes AI data centers require.
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