Albany Times Union

Semiconduc­tor developmen­t numbers jump

Scientists in area issued 5.2 percent of related patents nationwide

- By Larry Rulison

The Capital Region’s share of U.S. semiconduc­tor device developmen­t increased in 2018, according to the latest patent analysis by the Center for Economic Growth.

In 2018, Capital Region scientists were issued 1,302 semiconduc­tor-device patents, out of 25,170 issued nationwide, which is a 5.2 percent share, according to CEG.

In 2017, the Capital Region share of semiconduc­tor device patents was 4.8 percent. In 2016, it was 4.1 percent, CEG reported.

IBM generates the majority of the local semiconduc­tor device inventions, accounting for 785 of the 1,302 patents in 2018. Globalfoun­dries and General Electric Co., which has its research operations located in Niskayuna, were second and third on the list.

Computer chip scientists file patents with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to protect their inventions, and so CEG uses the patent data to measure how much semiconduc­tor innovation is taking place locally.

CEG counts a patent toward the local total if a local inventor is listed on the patent applicatio­n. CEG looks specifical­ly at semiconduc­tor device patents, which covers everything from computer chips to light-emitting diodes, or LEDS.

Locally, there is a lot of semiconduc­tor developmen­t at SUNY Polytechni­c Institute in Albany and at Globalfoun­dries’ Fab 8 computer chip factory in Malta. IBM has a large presence at SUNY Poly, as do semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing equipment suppliers like Tokyo Electron and Applied Materials. Globalfoun­dries also does joint developmen­t with its customers that produce patents in some cases.

There are also smaller semiconduc­tor technology companies that also file parents that add to the total.

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