Intel plans to invest up to $4.6 billion in a new semiconductor assembly and test facility in Miękinia near Wrocław as part of a multi-billion-dollar investment drive across Europe to build chip capacity.
This investment will create approx. 2,000 jobs. Concurrently fits perfectly into the profile of education and the subject of scientific research conducted at the Faculty of Electronics, Photonics and Microsystems.
For years, the Faculty has been educating students in the field of semiconductor devices, integrated circuit assembly, as well as their diagnostics and testing; the whole is complemented by issues in the field of methods of testing their reliability. Students learn about the construction of semiconductor elements and devices (discrete and integrated), and from what materials and how they are made. They will learn about their use in electronics and automation systems. In the case of digital integrated circuits, they will learn the principles of their programming and creating applications for the needs of the information society.
"This is extremely valuable knowledge, because even the most complex integrated circuit must be installed, packaged and tested in an electronic device - explains Prof. Rafał Walczak, Dean of the Faculty. - Often this element of electronic circuit technology determines their reliability, even in the most complex microprocessors."
New opportunities are opening up on the labor market, which make studies in electronics, photonics and automation even more attractive.
We invite you to study at the fields of study offered by the Faculty of Electronics, Photonics and Microsystems.
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