Engineering & Manufacturing × Career Path: Quality Manager

2797 matching jobs found.

Silicon Wafer Cutting Worker

This occupation handles the manufacturing process of accurately cutting silicon wafers into individual chips using dicing equipment. It involves equipment setup and management, verification of cutting accuracy, and quality inspections.

Silicon Wafer Cleaning Worker

Specialist profession that removes fine contaminants adhering to the surface of silicon wafers using chemical solutions or ultrapure water to maintain the quality of the semiconductor manufacturing process.

Silicon Abrasive Manufacturing Worker

Silicon abrasive manufacturing workers produce abrasive products using silicon compounds as raw materials through processes such as crushing, firing, particle size adjustment, and bonding agent addition.

Silicon Resin Processing Worker (Textile Industry)

A job that applies silicone resin to textile products to impart functionalities such as water repellency and durability.

Silicon Slicing Worker

A job that thinly slices silicon ingots and processes wafers that serve as the foundation for semiconductor manufacturing.

Silicon Sorting Worker (Semiconductor Product Manufacturing)

Specialized job in the semiconductor manufacturing process that inspects the appearance and quality of silicon wafers (silicon substrates) and sorts good products from defective ones.

Yarn Measurer (Textile Industry)

A job that measures and inspects the thickness (count) and quantity of yarn and determines whether it conforms to product standards.

Sample Collection Worker (Ironmaking, Steelmaking)

This occupation involves collecting samples for chemical analysis from molten metal or steel materials in ironmaking and steelmaking processes and providing them to the quality control department.

Paper Stock Preparation Worker

Manufacturing technician who adjusts paper stock (pulp slurry) used in the papermaking process, adds chemicals, and manages quality.

Silk Screen Printing Worker

Silk screen printing workers use screen plates to push out ink and transfer designs onto various flat materials such as clothing, stickers, and posters, serving as manufacturing technicians.