12 votes The big semiconductor water problem Posted March 12, 2022 by skybrian Tags: water, water recycling, semiconductors, taiwan, usa.az, substack.the asianometry newsletter, author.jon y https://asianometry.substack.com/p/the-big-semiconductor-water-problem Link information This data is scraped automatically and may be incorrect. Authors Jon Y Published Mar 9 2022 Word count 2026 words 2 comments Collapse replies Expand all Comments sorted by most votes newest first order posted relevance OK TavisNamara March 13, 2022 Link While I'm enjoying the read, I would like to highlight exactly one tiny segment of a sentence here because I enjoyed it so much: While I'm enjoying the read, I would like to highlight exactly one tiny segment of a sentence here because I enjoyed it so much: reverse electrodialysis, where salt ions are transported through a membrane using the power of friendship, 4 votes skybrian (OP) March 12, 2022 Link Here's an overview of how semiconductor factories use water, how they recycle it (or don't) and why they keep building them in the desert. Here's an overview of how semiconductor factories use water, how they recycle it (or don't) and why they keep building them in the desert. 3 votes
TavisNamara March 13, 2022 Link While I'm enjoying the read, I would like to highlight exactly one tiny segment of a sentence here because I enjoyed it so much: While I'm enjoying the read, I would like to highlight exactly one tiny segment of a sentence here because I enjoyed it so much: reverse electrodialysis, where salt ions are transported through a membrane using the power of friendship, 4 votes
skybrian (OP) March 12, 2022 Link Here's an overview of how semiconductor factories use water, how they recycle it (or don't) and why they keep building them in the desert. Here's an overview of how semiconductor factories use water, how they recycle it (or don't) and why they keep building them in the desert. 3 votes
While I'm enjoying the read, I would like to highlight exactly one tiny segment of a sentence here because I enjoyed it so much:
Here's an overview of how semiconductor factories use water, how they recycle it (or don't) and why they keep building them in the desert.