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The US Department of Commerce has allocated CHIPS Act funding to boost domestic semiconductor production. Companies Analog Devices, Coherent, IntelliEPI, and Macom will use this funding to increase manufacturing capacity, modernize facilities, and enhance the US semiconductor supply chain.
Investments in Key Semiconductor Companies
On January 16, the Department of Commerce announced preliminary funding agreements for four semiconductor manufacturers:
- Analog Devices will receive up to $105 million to expand mature node semiconductor manufacturing at its Oregon and Washington facilities. The investment will boost capacity by 70%, focusing on 180nm and 350nm process nodes. It will also expand module production at its Massachusetts facility for commercial, space, and defense applications.
- Coherent will receive up to $79 million to increase 150mm and 200mm silicon carbide (SiC) wafer production at its Easton, Pennsylvania facility. The expansion will add 750,000 substrates per year and double epitaxial wafer output, supporting energy and military applications.
- IntelliEPI will use $10.3 million to modernize its Allen, Texas facility, which produces epitaxy materials for indium phosphide, gallium arsenide (GaAs), gallium antimonide, and gallium nitride (GaN) wafers. These materials are essential for defense, AI, data centers, telecommunications, and automotive industries.
- Macom has announced a $345 million investment over five years, supported by up to $180 million in CHIPS Act funding, federal tax credits, and state funding. The company will modernize its Massachusetts and North Carolina wafer fabrication plants. Its Massachusetts facility will upgrade 100mm production lines for GaAs, GaN, and silicon materials and install 150mm GaN-on-SiC manufacturing. In North Carolina, Macom will develop 150mm wafer production and expand metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) epitaxial growth.
Strengthening the US Semiconductor Supply Chain
The CHIPS Act investments will expand domestic semiconductor production, ensuring a more resilient supply chain for key industries such as automotive, defense, telecommunications, and AI. These companies will also benefit from the Advanced Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit, which covers 25% of qualified capital expenditures.
By scaling up domestic semiconductor manufacturing, the US aims to reduce dependence on foreign suppliers and strengthen its position in advanced technology sectors.
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