Corning,
the
maker
of
Gorilla
Glass,
is
set
to
receive
up
to
$32
million
in
funding
under
the
CHIPS
and
Science
Act.
In
an
announcement
on
Friday,
the
US
Commerce
Department
said
the
proposed
funding
will
help
Corning
increase
production
of
its
glass
products
used
in
the
chip-making
process.
The
announcement
comes
just
days
after
the
European
Commission
opened
an
antitrust
investigation
into
Corning
over
whether
it
uses
exclusive
supply
agreements
to
stifle
competition.
Both
Samsung
and
Apple
use
Corning’s
ultra-tough
alkali-aluminosilicate
glass
—
or
Gorilla
Glass
—
on
their
phones,
tablets,
and
smartwatches.
However,
the
proposed
CHIPS
Act
funding
doesn’t
have
anything
to
do
with
Gorilla
Glass.
Corning
will
put
the
funding
toward
the
production
of
its
High
Purity
Fused
Silica
and
Extreme
Ultra-Low
Expansion
Glass.
As
noted
in
the
press
release,
both
types
of
glass
are
used
in
lithography
machines
and
photomasks
used
to
image
a
chip’s
pattern
onto
a
silicon
wafer.
It
will
also
allow
Corning
to
“scale
a
novel
manufacturing
process”
in
its
Canton,
New
York
plant,
which
is
expected
to
create
130
new
manufacturing
jobs
and
more
than
175
construction
jobs.
Signed
by
President
Joe
Biden
in
2022,
the
CHIPS
Act
is
supposed
to
bolster
semiconductor
manufacturing
in
the
US.
And
now,
Bloomberg
reports
that
the
Biden
administration
is
scrambling
to
issue
final
grants
as
its
time
in
office
runs
out.
The
future
of
the
CHIPS
Act
under
President-Elect
Donald
Trump
remains
unclear.
Last
week,
House
Speaker
Mike
Johnson
(R-LA)
walked
back
a
statement
saying
Republicans
would
“repeal”
the
legislation,
instead
saying
they
would
“streamline”
it.
(Originally posted by Emma Roth)
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