- overview, 4 stars
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Design for manufacturability (Integrated Circuits)
Design for manufacturability (DFM) refers to the general engineering art of designing products in such a way that they are easy to manufacture.
The basic idea exists in almost all engineering disciplines, but of course the details differ wildly depending on the manufacturing technology.
Here are examples: Design for manufacturability for integrated circuits.
- overview, 3 stars
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Design for Manufacturability @ SI2.org
Design for manufacturability (DFM) is no longer a localized issue in the fab, but one that that transcends the supply chain.
More and more, manufacturing cycles and yield must be considered as an integral part of design of the library elements and the IC as a whole.
Manufacturing considerations must be an integral part of the design process and manufacturing decisions must be considerate of the design.
IC production must become a...
- overview, 2 stars
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Design for manufacturability (PCB)
Design for manufacturability (DFM for short.
Often referred to as 'design for manufacturing') is a design methodology intended to ease the manufacturing process of a given product.
In the PCB design process DFM leads to a set design guidelines that attempt to ensure manufacturability.
By doing so, probable production problems may be addressed during the design stage.
Ideally, DFM guidelines take into account the processes and capabilities...
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