IT center joins students, industry
Virginia's Semiconductor Manufacturing Information Technology Center should help students learn about IT, while giving a company extra manufacturing help
University of Virginia students will analyze Dominion Semiconductor's production
process in a collaboration that will hopefully give students information
technology experience and help Dominion increase productivity.
The university, the company and the Virginia Center for Innovative Technology
(CIT), partnered to create the Semiconductor Manufacturing Information Technology
Center, allowing university students and faculty to use data mining and
warehousing software to analyze the production process. Because of the large
number of students, they will be able to better analyze the production process
than Dominion can alone.
There are two major benefits of the collaboration, said Nancy Vorona, CIT's
senior industry director for advanced materials and electronics. "One of
Virginia's premier companies will become more productive and students will
work with a premier company and develop new tools," she said.
The data mining and other information technology will allow students to
analyze how the manufacturing process would respond to certain changes,
ideally allowing them to find ways to improve the process.
SMITC will be at Dominion's facility in Manassas and at a companion laboratory
at the University's Charlottesville campus, staffed by graduate-level UVA
researchers.
Each partner contributed funds for the center. CIT contributed $35,000,
the university gave $25,000 and Dominion gave $35,000 in cash and a "few
hundred thousand in kind" for work, staff and other expenses to build the
center, Vorona said.
From the companion site at the university, students can use the Internet
to access data at Dominion's plant, Vorona said.
The center's mission is to use information technology to analyze and increase
factory production for companies in related fields, not just at Dominion.
Vorona said the program would probably spread to other universities and
companies.
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