Combined Technologies of CoorsTek and former Covalent Materials Featured at SEMICON Japan
Dezember 15 2015
Custom engineered ceramic components support advanced semiconductor processing

Tokyo, Japan and Golden, Colorado USA, December 15, 2015 - CoorsTek, the world’s largest engineered ceramics manufacturer, will exhibit its complete line of semiconductor processing components at SEMICON Japan from December 16-18 in Tokyo. For the first time at this event, the integrated capabilities of CoorsTek and Covalent Materials (formerly Toshiba Ceramics, now CoorsTek KK) will be on display. CoorsTek acquired Covalent Materials in December 2014, shortly after last year’s exhibition.
CoorsTek will be featuring high-purity ceramic materials and durable chamber-critical components including:
- Exceptionally pure semiconductor-grade ceramics such as PureSiC™ CVD Silicon Carbide, PlasmaPure-UC™ Alumina, and StatSafe™ ESD-Safe Ceramics
- Aluminum Nitride, Graphite, Quartz, Yttria and other advanced materials
- Custom engineered components for RTP, epi, etch, implant, and other critical processes
The semiconductor industry is a key market to CoorsTek, where the company is among the largest, most experienced, and trusted partners to semiconductor processing OEMs. “As semiconductor fabs continue to move to advanced nodes, the need for intrinsic purity and process cleanliness becomes even more critical,” explains Jonathan Coors, CEO of CoorsTek Semiconductor and Medical Group. “The addition of sophisticated CoorsTek KK technologies over the past year means we continue to develop new ways to help our customers achieve higher yields, less downtime, and faster throughput.”
Visit CoorsTek at booth 5621 to discuss your application, or find out more at coorstek.com.
“As semiconductor fabs continue to move to advanced nodes, the need for intrinsic purity and process cleanliness becomes even more critical. The addition of sophisticated CoorsTek KK technologies over the past year means we continue to develop new ways to help our customers achieve higher yields, less downtime, and faster throughput.”
Jonathan Coors
CEO of CoorsTek Semiconductor and Medical Group