Key Points

Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw announced the successful fabrication of 20 indigenous semiconductor chips designed by students. These chips were developed under India's Design Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme, which supports domestic semiconductor innovation. The initiative involves students from 17 engineering institutions, including IITs, and offers financial incentives for commercialization. The DLI Scheme aims to strengthen India's semiconductor design and manufacturing ecosystem.

Key Points: Ashwini Vaishnaw Announces 20 Student-Designed Chips Taped Out at SCL Mohali

  • 20 student-designed chips fabricated at SCL Mohali
  • Part of India's DLI Scheme to boost semiconductor capabilities
  • Chips developed by students from 17 engineering institutions
  • Scheme offers financial incentives up to Rs 30 crore
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20 indigenous student-designed chips taped out from SCL Mohali: Ashwini Vaishnaw

Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw reveals 20 indigenous semiconductor chips designed by students from 17 Indian institutions under the DLI Scheme.

"Bharat's Yuva Shakti, 20 indigenous student-designed chips taped out from SCL Mohali. – Ashwini Vaishnaw"

New Delhi, August 13

Highlighting the role of India's young talent in the technology sector, Union Minister of Electronics & Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw noted that 20 indigenous student-designed semiconductor chips have been successfully fabricated at the Semi-Conductor Laboratory (SCL) in Mohali.

New Delhi [India], August 13 (ANI): Highlighting the role of India's young talent in the technology sector, Union Minister of Electronics & Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw noted that 20 indigenous student-designed semiconductor chips have been successfully fabricated at the Semi-Conductor Laboratory (SCL) in Mohali.

In a social media post, the minister stated, "Bharat's Yuva Shakti, 20 indigenous student-designed chips taped out from SCL Mohali."

According to the Ministry of Electronics & IT, these chips were designed by students from 17 Indian engineering institutions, including several IITs, and successfully fabricated at its facility.

These designs are part of the Design Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme, which aims to strengthen semiconductor design and manufacturing capabilities in India.

The ministry further added that the DLI Scheme, approved with an outlay of Rs 1,000 crore, supports domestic companies, startups, and MSMEs in designing semiconductor products.

Designing and commercializing semiconductor products involves high entry barriers, long development timelines, and intense global competition.

To address these challenges, the DLI Scheme offers design infrastructure support, such as Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools and Intellectual Property (IP) cores, for early prototyping.

It also provides financial incentives of up to 50 per cent of eligible costs, capped at Rs 15 crore per application, for design prototyping, scaling up, and volume production.

Additionally, there are incentives of 6 to 4 per cent of net sales turnover over five years, capped at Rs 30 crore per application, for deployment and commercialization of chip solutions.

Since its launch in December 2021, 278 academic institutions under the C2S programme and 72 startups under the DLI scheme have been approved for access to advanced EDA tools.

The ministry stated "The DLI Scheme is implemented in close consultation with stakeholders and beneficiary companies. Any modifications needed will be done based on evolving requirements and feedback".

The ministry also noted that financial support has been sanctioned to 23 firms and startups for designing chips for applications such as surveillance cameras, energy meters, microprocessor IPs, and networking.

Of these, ten companies have secured venture capital funding to scale up their prototypes for commercialization, while six companies have completed prototype tape-outs at various semiconductor foundries.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
While this is good progress, we need to ensure these designs actually get commercialized. Too often our research stays in labs. Hope the startups get proper market access and funding to scale up.
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Rohit P
Mohali SCL doing great work! Remember when we used to import everything? Now our own students designing chips. Jai Hind! 🙏
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, I'm impressed by how quickly India is catching up in semiconductor design. The EDA tools access for academic institutions is particularly smart policy. More countries should learn from this model.
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Karthik V
₹1000 crore investment is good but we need 10x more if we want to compete with Taiwan and South Korea. Hope government increases budget in next phase. Manufacturing is next big challenge!
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Nisha Z
So proud to see girls from IITs contributing to these chip designs! STEM education for women is changing India's tech landscape 💪
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David E
The financial incentives structure looks well-designed - supporting both prototyping and commercialization. India's semiconductor policy seems more practical than many Western nations' approaches.

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