Logic-Led Demand and End-Use Mix Define the Next Wave

As the bedrock of semiconductor fabrication, silicon wafers channel the industry’s performance gains into tangible devices. Stratview Research pegs the silicon wafers market at USD 18.6 billion in 2022 and forecasts USD 26 billion by 2028 (9.2% CAGR), reflecting the momentum behind digital transformation, edge intelligence, and electrified mobility.
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Drivers
A defining feature of the current cycle is the primacy of logic. Stratview identifies logic as the largest application segment, fueled by the ubiquity of smartphones, tablets, and laptops and reinforced by the rollout of 5G, which demands more capable processors and RF front-ends. As software workloads (AI, graphics, security) intensify, wafer demand benefits not only from unit growth but from rising die sizes and multi-die integration trends that increase wafer starts per device family.
Memory remains a crucial complement: the surge of AI training and inference, streaming, and cloud data services requires higher bandwidth and capacity, keeping DRAM and NAND on aggressive roadmaps—again translating to steady wafer requirements alongside logic. Add to this the DAO category—discrete, analog, optoelectronics, and sensors—expanding with automotive safety systems and industrial/consumer IoT, and the total demand picture is broad-based rather than single-threaded.
From an end-use standpoint, computers currently hold the largest share, while communications is poised to post the fastest growth, mirroring secular device replacement cycles and network upgrades. These end-uses also amplify the need for power management ICs and mixed-signal devices—areas that place stringent quality and reliability expectations on wafers.
On the supply side, product mix skews toward 300 mm wafers, which deliver the economies of scale needed for high-volume logic and memory fabrication. The economics are straightforward: more die per wafer lowers cost per function, making 300 mm the logical backbone for leading-edge and high-volume trailing-edge devices alike.
Challenges
As device architectures (chiplets, 2.5D/3D packaging) evolve, wafers must meet tighter planarity, defect, and surface specs to ensure downstream assembly yields. The concentration of wafer manufacturing and consumption in Asia-Pacific accelerates development cycles but also introduces coordination risks across complex cross-border supply chains. Lastly, synchronizing new capacity with demand cycles is non-trivial: long equipment lead times and high fixed costs necessitate disciplined, data-driven expansions to avoid periods of under-utilization.
(These challenges should be considered against Stratview’s call-outs: Asia-Pacific’s >80% share, logic’s leadership, computers as the largest end-use, and 300 mm as the dominant size—all of which pinpoint where operational excellence matters most.)
Conclusion
The silicon wafers market is not just growing—it’s diversifying in ways that reward capability and scale. Logic-led demand, buoyed by 5G and pervasive computing, is shaping specifications and capacity decisions, while memory and DAO ensure a stable, multi-segment pull on wafer supply. With 300 mm entrenched, suppliers that continuously elevate wafer quality and collaborate closely with fabs on next-gen requirements will capture outsized value. Regionally, the gravity of Asia-Pacific will persist, even as North America and Europe invest in resilience. For strategy and operations teams, the mandate is clear: align offerings to the most attractive segments (logic and communications), double-down on 300 mm performance, and engineer supply resilience to thrive through 2028 and beyond.
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