A semiconductor wafer travels around the globe five times on average before becoming the chip in your smartphone. Each journey represents a potential risk to device reliability that few consumers—or even industry professionals—ever consider.
Behind every high-performing semiconductor device lies a carefully orchestrated logistics operation ensuring these sensitive components arrive intact and functioning. As Francoise von Trapp discovers in this eye-opening conversation with John Desmond and Valentina Aplenalp of Kuehne+Nagel, the journey matters just as much as the manufacturing.
Drawing from his background in semiconductor design and manufacturing, John explains how vibration, temperature fluctuations, humidity, and even light exposure can compromise device integrity during transit. Wafers transported in specialized containers called FOUPs, delicate packaging materials, and critical replacement parts for manufacturing equipment all require extraordinary care throughout their global journeys.
Valentina reveals the sophisticated systems developed to protect these valuable shipments: real-time environmental monitoring sensors connected to 24/7 control towers, specialized air-ride vehicles, and climate-controlled packaging solutions. When emergencies arise—like a critical equipment failure threatening production—their time-critical logistics teams deliver replacement parts within hours, not days.
Most fascinating is the human element. The Semicon Chain certification program ensures every person who might handle semiconductor shipments receives specialized training, creating an end-to-end system where nothing is left to chance. As John puts it, they aim to be "the best partner that you never know you had"—the hidden force ensuring semiconductor reliability.
Whether you're a semiconductor professional, supply chain specialist, or simply curious about the invisible infrastructure supporting our digital world, this episode offers rare insight into how logistics enables technological innovation.