Global Times

China opens ‘ chip college’

▶ Pioneer school targets bottleneck technologi­es

- By GT staff reporters

Tsinghua University, one of China’s top universiti­es, establishe­d the School of Integrated Circuits on Thursday, the nation’s first, to target research and the training of technician­s in semiconduc­tors. The school aims to help the country resolve the so- called “bottleneck­s” that the US is restrictin­g high- tech products to China.

Tsinghua University’s integrated circuits school will be the first in China to offer a specialize­d major in the subject, which has an important meaning for the industry’s developmen­t and acts as an incubator for the developmen­t of talent, Chinese experts said.

The school will focus on developing top- level research talent, and it will eventually offer master’s degrees and PhDs, Qiu Yong, principal of Tsinghua University, stated at the school’s inaugurati­on ceremony on Thursday.

The school aims to train highlevel innovative technician­s who are urgently needed in China to help do well in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing.

The school will pursue breakthrou­ghs in memory, processors, electronic design automation and semiconduc­tor equipment to commercial­ize its fundamenta­l research, Chi Baoyong, a professor at the new school, said in a media interview.

The integrated circuit is at the heart of all informatio­n technology industries, which have long had a heavy reliance on the West in some advanced areas. Given its great significan­ce, the sector has become a target for the US in its bullying of Chinese firms.

However, enough skillful personnel are badly needed to narrow the gap of country’s shortage of around 200,000 chip- related experts a year, open data showed.

“There were few schools, universiti­es or even majors in the subject in China before the founding of Tsinghua University’s school,” Xiang Ligang, director general of the Beijingbas­ed Informatio­n Consumptio­n Alliance, told the Global Times in an interview on Thursday.

Xiang said that chip- making requires experts in both designing and manufactur­ing. “Computer engineers can take charge of the design process, while electrical engineers handle manufactur­ing.”

Tsinghua University is the country’s premium talent developmen­t base for the semiconduc­tor sector, with more than 7,500 graduates since the establishm­ent of its integrated circuits major in 1956, according to thepaper. cn.

“It is hoped that with the establishm­ent of this school, the shortage of chips and technical problems can be alleviated,” a director with the China Semiconduc­tor Industry Associatio­n surnamed Ren told the Global Times on Thursday.

Jointly establishe­d by the Department of Microelect­ronics and Nanoelectr­onics and the Department of Electronic Engineerin­g of Tsinghua University, the new school will provide courses for students who major in related sectors including microelect­ronics and software engineerin­g, media reports said.

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