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United States Technology

Hurricane Helene Took Out NC Town the Entire Tech World Relies On (axios.com) 66

The small town of Spruce Pine, North Carolina, which supplies high-purity quartz essential for semiconductor production, is reeling from the damage caused by Tropical Storm Helene. An anonymous reader quotes a report from Axios: Spruce Pine is one of the only places in the world to mine high-purity quartz. The mineral is an essential ingredient of chips in countless products, including medical devices, solar panels, cellphones and the chips powering the latest tech craze: artificial intelligence. It's difficult to underscore the significance of Spruce Pine -- a town of about 2,000 people, known for its charming downtown and blossoming arts scene -- to the global economy. Economics editor Ed Conway put it best in his 2023 book "Material World," writing: "It is rare, unheard of almost, for a single site to control the global supply of a crucial material. Yet if you want to get high-purity quartz -- the kind you need to make those crucibles without which you can't make silicon wafers -- it has to come from Spruce Pine."

The Quartz Corp and Sibelco both export high-purity quartz from Spruce Pine. While there are other places to find the material, such as Russia and Brazil, this mountain town has the highest quantity of the highest purity, says Conway. A few weeks of shutdown is not the end of the world, Conway tells Axios. However, longer than that could put the industry into "another crisis." The semiconductor industry would need to find alternatives. [...] The mines in Spruce Pine are still accounting for their workers and families, the international companies stated. The level of destruction at the sites is unknown. However, even if the facilities are intact, the railroads that move the quartz will likely need drastic repairs.
The Quartz Corp and Sibelco temporarily halted operations on Sept. 26 and haven't said when they might reopen. "This is second order of priority," The Quartz Corp said in a statement. "Our top priority remains the health and safety of our employees and their families."
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Hurricane Helene Took Out NC Town the Entire Tech World Relies On

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  • piezo (Score:4, Funny)

    by bugs2squash ( 1132591 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2024 @04:13PM (#64835357)
    What happens if you explode dynamite in the mountain, will it electrocute everyone nearby ?
  • Used to grow synthetic quartz crystals, not the crystals themselves.
    • Used to grow synthetic quartz crystals

      No, explicitly not crystals but silica glass.

      Silica has four different crystal structures (quartz-alpha and -beta ; cristobalite ; tridymite) which inter-convert in the few hundred degrees between silicon's melting point and the melting point of the different crystal structures of silica. If your crucible experiences thermal cycling, making it of crystalline silica (whatever form you initially use) you'll get growth of one or more of the other forms, with up to several

  • priorities (Score:2, Insightful)

    by awwshit ( 6214476 )

    The sad part for the community is that the mine will be more of a priority for recovery than the people.

    • Re:priorities (Score:4, Informative)

      by Rinnon ( 1474161 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2024 @04:59PM (#64835455)
      True, but they'll still probably be a bumped up in priority compared to other towns of similar population that AREN'T providing said quartz.
    • Re:priorities (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2024 @05:02PM (#64835467)

      Reopening the mine, getting people back to work and earning an income is a good way to help them recover.

    • Re:priorities (Score:4, Insightful)

      by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2024 @05:05PM (#64835469)
      They're better off for it than the communities that don't have anything the rest of the world needs. They might get some government assistance to ease the blow, but no one is going to go out of their way to invest in the community to help them rebuild. The reality is that many of those communities could be anywhere and they only exist in the first place because farmers from hundreds of years ago couldn't travel any farther in a day so it seemed like a reasonable place to put a town. It's only stuck around out of inertia and it's probably less expensive for everyone to relocate than to rebuild what was previously there.

      A mine with a valuable resource gives people a reason to stay and a reason for investment into infrastructure to move the minerals and to build homes for the workers and businesses to serve the needs of the people living in those homes, much in the same way the needs of farmers were the reason for a town to spring up in the first place. Their mine will give their community a better chance at survival than the sympathies of a country.
    • The mines are highly automated as well, so the employees don't add much to the economy.
  • Since China wants to regulate certain materials to the US and western companies so they can control it, the US should ban export of this material to China as well to Control their development of advanced chips.
  • by az-saguaro ( 1231754 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2024 @05:38PM (#64835555)

    Thanks to Luckyo who posted this link for an intro to the subject:

    https://maxtonco.com/top-3-hig... [maxtonco.com]

    Follow these links as well:

    https://www.sibelco.com/en [sibelco.com]
    https://www.sibelco.com/en/150... [sibelco.com]

    My question is this:

    Industry needs the quartz.
    Sibelco et al supply it as they do because high grade ores can be mined and processed to serve the needs of customers and the industry, and mining nature's ore is the most economically efficient way to do so.

    But, what if supply dries up, because the ore body is spent, or because of geopolitical BS, or "the economy" changes, or in this case due to natural disaster?

    Can such high grade quartz be manufactured.

    We can do the same for diamonds using carbon, so why not for quartz using silicon or silica?

    There was an economic incentive to do so for diamonds because diamonds have high retail value.
    Sand, silica, and glass are abundant and cheap, so mining existing deposits is cheap, but if the natural reserves dry up, could manufactured quartz be just as or nearly as cheap?

    Is this technically possible?
    (Has it been demonstrated or done already?)
    If the right economic or geopolitical incentive was there, could this be done, and with how much development effort or lead time?

    • by ffkom ( 3519199 )

      Can such high grade quartz be manufactured.

      Yes, but at higher cost. It's not like the Quartz at Spruce Pine has no contaminants at all, it is just more pure than in other places, so it requires less expensive processing to reach the required purity.

    • by Hodr ( 219920 ) on Wednesday October 02, 2024 @06:12PM (#64835635) Homepage

      They already produce synthetic High Purity Quartz for the semiconductor industry, and they use a CVD process similar to synthetic diamonds. It's a lot slower and more expensive than just digging it out of the ground which is why it isn't the primary method of obtaining this material.

      https://www.ndk.com/en/product... [ndk.com]

    • But, what if supply dries up, because the ore body is spent, or because of geopolitical BS, or "the economy" changes, or in this case due to natural disaster?

      Silicon is not a rare element on the Earth. There are other sources of silicon. There however will be higher costs to refine silicon.

      Can such high grade quartz be manufactured.

      Wrong question: "Can other materials be processed to be as useful" is the right question. Yes. It has been done before with other sources of silicon. Again, the main factor is cost.

      Is this technically possible?

      It has been in past decades. The main reason this quartz was used was because the high purity means fewer steps in refining meaning lower cost. It is not impossible to get that level of purity.

  • Either they have insurance, or someone else will get enough money to access a valuable resource again.

    If it truly matters, then someone should legislate how secure access should be to it. I'm sure we could create transport methods that still worked with enough money thrown at it.

  • "... the kind you need to make those crucibles without which you can't make silicon wafers ..."

    So we've lost access to a material needed to make a tool with. I assume we can wait on that for a bit, worst case. Just keep using the old ones.

    Or this some stupid disposable, one use 'tool'?

    • So we've lost access to a material needed to make a tool with. I assume we can wait on that for a bit, worst case. Just keep using the old ones.

      The crucibles are pretty much destroyed with each use. Also using the crucible imparts impurities like dopant that would contaminate the next batch. Crucibles are like coffee filters. They could be used multiple times but utility decreases with usage as well as more contaminants are introduced.

  • I have never even heard of this dependency and quartz does not figure in regular chips. Is this about cutting tools?

    • I did some searching and this is what I gathered. High purity quartz is used to manufacture fused quartz crucibles. Crucibles are containers used for smelting metals and other high melting point materials. Fused quarts crucibles have the advantages of being resistant to thermal shock, have negligible expansion properties, and are non-conductive. They are used to smelt silicon for chip wafers, to make components in solar collectors, to process rare earth metals, and to make optical fiber components.
      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Thanks, interesting. So not really something that gets ordered just-in-time then. Might still be a problem. Or not. But having resilient supply lines was always an advantage for any industry. Maybe some people will now remember that as catastrophes like the one at hand get more and more frequent.

        • I don't know what the options are for making this particular supply line more resilient. My understanding is that the Spruce Pine Mining District is a quirk of geology. The Appalachians are the world's oldest mountain range and the Blue Ridge is pretty unique. There may not be other locations that can be mined efficiently. Maybe they can somehow make the rail lines more resilient.

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