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Jaymin Amin on materials engineering

From In conversation with Jaymin Amin, Corning Gorilla Glass, and Technical Guruji · · ETSpecials

“If you consider where we were back in 2007, the glass we were producing was about 1.2–1.3 millimeters thick; glass today that goes on is in the range of 0.5 to 0.6 millimeters — you've come down by 50% or even more in thickness and a lot of the durability is controlled by the thickness.”

Jaymin Amin
Senior VP & CTO, Corning Inc.
materials engineeringproduct evolutionglass thickness

On , Jaymin Amin, Senior VP & CTO at Corning Inc., spoke about materials engineering during In conversation with Jaymin Amin, Corning Gorilla Glass, and Technical Guruji on ETSpecials.

In conversation with Jaymin Amin, Corning Gorilla Glass, and Technical Guruji
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In conversation with Jaymin Amin, Corning Gorilla Glass, and Technical Guruji
ETSpecials
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In conversation with Jaymin Amin, VP, Technology and Product Development, Corning Gorilla Glass, and Technical Guruji
Jaymin Amin

About Jaymin Amin

Senior VP & CTO · Corning Inc.

In a November 2020 conversation, Jaymin Amin, then Vice President of Technology and Product Development at Corning Gorilla Glass, discussed smartphone durability concerns. He stated that the primary consumer concerns are breakages from drops and scratches on cover glass, noting that people will live with scratches but not with breaks for extended periods. Amin explained that glass toughness is determined by its chemical composition and the strengthening process used, and that Corning creates deep compression layers on the glass surface to prevent flaws from penetrating. He also noted that glass thickness has decreased from about 1.2–1.3 millimeters in 2007 to 0.5–0.6 millimeters today. Amin discussed the introduction of Gorilla Glass Victus, which he described as the toughest Gorilla Glass produced to date. He said Victus has twice the scratch performance of previous generations and about four times that of competitive glasses, with drop performance of about two meters compared to around 1.6 meters for Gorilla Glass 6. Amin explained that the name Victus was chosen because the glass simultaneously improved both drop and scratch performance, a combination not achieved previously, and that the Latin word meaning "life" resonated with the company's culture of innovation.

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