Made in Arizona to power the world’s devices


Outside of building with American flag and Arizona flag hanging ovefr it and a sign that says Made in America

TSMC is investing $40 billion in two North Phoenix fabs to manufacture high-tech chips. The facilities will help bring more semiconductor industry manufacturing back to the U.S., helping U.S. companies like Apple and AMD secure critical components domestically.

Editor's note: This story originally appeared in the spring 2023 issue of ASU Thrive magazine. 

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company announced that in addition to its first Arizona fabrication facility, which drivers can see in north Phoenix off the I-17, it has also started the construction of a second fab.

The first is scheduled to begin production in 2024, the second in 2026. The overall investment for the two fabs will be approximately $40 billion, representing the largest foreign direct investment in Arizona history and one of the largest in the history of the U.S.

“ASU will work to provide the talent to support the workforce that TSMC needs and research that is of value,” says Michael M. Crow, president of ASU, which is an education partner of TSMC.

As part of the expansion, TSMC recruiter Alexandra Moulinet and early talent manager Roxanna Vega met with students outside the Engineering Center building G, as they and another representative from TSMC visited ASU. The company held information sessions about employment opportunities now and in the future. TSMC is the world’s largest contract chipmaker and is constructing two major chip fabrication plants in the northwest Valley.

To learn more about engineering careers visit career.engineering.asu.edu.

Learn more about ASU’s work in semiconductors and with local partners at neweconomy.asu.edu.

More Science and technology

 

Asteroid in the night sky above sandy dunes.

ASU microscopes help solve decades-old asteroid-impact deposit mystery

Axel Wittmann had always had “a fondness for exotic rocks,” as he puts it, his favorite being suevite, formed from intense meteorite collisions. But in 2009, when he met fellow geologist Philippe…

A portrait of U.S. Space Force Maj. Tyler T. Williams.

Major in motion

Inside a dimly lit computer lab at Arizona State University, U.S. Space Force Maj. Tyler Williams leans over a glowing monitor, lines of simulated network traffic scrolling by faster than most eyes…

Outline of a head with arrows emerging from it on a pale green background.

New study uncovers another role for the cerebellum, offering clues about autism

There is a window of time, a critical period, during infancy and early childhood when the brain learns how to process information — what different objects look like, parsing sounds that make up…