CMP Slurry Cost of Ownership
The price per litre is one of the least useful numbers when comparing CMP slurries. This guide explains total cost of ownership — the consumption, throughput, dilution and yield factors that determine what a slurry really costs, with a worked example and negotiation levers.
Why Litre Price Misleads
A slurry that costs more per litre but removes faster, lasts longer in the loop and protects yield is frequently the cheaper option in production. Unit price ignores how much you actually consume, how fast you process, and — most importantly — what defects cost you downstream. Cost of ownership should be treated as a selection criterion alongside the technical factors in the selection framework; see also the pillar guide.
The right unit of comparison is not cost per litre but cost per good wafer — the total slurry-attributable cost divided by the number of yielding wafers it helps produce. That single shift in metric changes most slurry decisions.
The Real Cost Drivers
- Consumption rate — litres of slurry per wafer, set by flow rate, polish time and any reclaim.
- Removal rate and throughput — a faster slurry processes more wafers per hour, spreading fixed costs.
- Dilution ratio — concentrates that dilute favourably lower effective cost and freight.
- Defectivity and yield — usually the largest hidden cost; scrapped or reworked wafers dwarf slurry price.
- Consumable interactions — pad life and clean efficiency are affected by slurry choice.
- Logistics, storage and shelf life — freight, storage conditions and waste from expired material.
- Disposal and waste treatment — used slurry and rinse must be treated, adding an environmental-handling cost.
Building a True Cost Model
| Cost element | Typical impact | Often overlooked? |
|---|---|---|
| Slurry unit price | Visible, moderate | No — over-weighted |
| Consumption per wafer | 高い | Sometimes |
| Throughput / removal rate | 高い | Yes |
| Yield / defect-driven scrap | 非常に高い | Yes — frequently dominant |
| Pad and clean interaction | 中程度 | Yes |
| Logistics, waste, shelf life | Low–moderate | Yes |
On most production lines, yield impact is the single largest term in slurry cost of ownership. A slightly more expensive slurry that lowers defectivity almost always wins on total cost.
A Worked Illustration
Consider two candidate slurries for the same step. Slurry A costs less per litre but consumes more per wafer and runs slightly slower; Slurry B costs more per litre but dilutes better, removes faster and reduces scratch defects. Even before counting yield, B’s higher throughput and favourable dilution can erase its unit-price disadvantage. Once a modest yield improvement is included, B is clearly cheaper per good wafer. The numbers will differ for every line, but the structure of the comparison is what matters: always carry consumption, throughput and yield through to a per-good-wafer figure rather than stopping at the quote.
Slurry Reduction and Reclaim
Because slurry is consumed in large volumes, programmes that reduce consumption directly cut cost: optimised dispense and flow control, point-of-use blending to avoid waste, and in some cases slurry reclaim or recycling. These initiatives must be validated to ensure they do not compromise defectivity or stability, but where they work they improve both cost and the environmental footprint of the process.
The Stability and Reliability Factor
An unstable slurry inflates cost invisibly: scrapped wafers, extra rework, shorter shelf life and tighter quality checks. That is why slurry stability belongs in any honest cost model. Supply reliability matters too — a disruption that idles a tool is enormously expensive, which feeds directly into multi-source planning.
Using Cost of Ownership to Decide and Negotiate
Compare candidate slurries on modelled cost per good wafer, not per litre. Run them under your own conditions, capture consumption, throughput and defectivity, and fold in logistics, waste and reliability. The same model is a negotiating tool: it lets you discuss value with suppliers in terms of total cost rather than headline price, and it pairs naturally with the supplier evaluation in the manufacturers and suppliers guide.
よくある質問
What is CMP slurry cost of ownership?
Why is litre price a poor way to compare slurries?
What is the biggest hidden cost in slurry selection?
How can slurry consumption be reduced?
How does slurry stability affect cost?
Talk to the JEEZ slurry engineering team
From first slurry selection to defectivity optimisation and multi-source qualification, JEEZ — Jizhi Electronic Technology Co., Ltd. — helps you match the right polishing slurry to your material and process targets.
Contact JEEZ →Part of the JEEZ Polishing Slurry knowledge series. Reviewed and updated June 2026 by Jizhi Electronic Technology Co., Ltd.