Semiconductor cleanrooms are the underexamined foundational layer of modern chip manufacturing. While capital, talent, and government policy receive most attention in semiconductor industrial discourse, the physical infrastructure required to manufacture chips at competitive yield is rarely treated with comparable analytical rigour. This paper synthesises four areas of established knowledge — contamination physics, yield economics, ISO 14644 classification, and cleanroom engineering systems — and applies them to the question of national semiconductor capability development, with a specific lens on India's industrial position. Four contamination vectors are examined: airborne particles, chemical molecules, electrostatic discharge, and structural vibration — each capable of destroying circuits at scales below human perception. The paper introduces two original analytical contributions: first, a structured comparison demonstrating that pharmaceutical cleanroom expertise is not transferable to semiconductor cleanroom requirements across six engineering dimensions; second, a cleanroom sophistication ladder mapping process-node manufacturing capability to ISO classification requirements and India's current and 5-year-horizon position on each rung. The principal finding is that building a single fab is a 3–5 year capital project, while building the capability to construct and operate fabs reliably at world-class yield is a 15–20 year industrial ecosystem development — and that these two timelines are routinely conflated in policy discourse. Counter-arguments are addressed explicitly. The paper concludes with stakeholder-specific recommendations across immediate, near-term, and strategic horizons for Indian policymakers, industry, and engineering professionals.
Sreenath Radhakrishnan (Sun,) studied this question.