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Thursday, April 19, 2007
0700-0800 REGISTRATION/BREAKFAST
0800-0810 Welcome/Introduction M. Fritze, DARPA
Materials/Synthesis 0810-0825 Growth of Graphene W. Mitchel, AFRL 0825-0840 Expoloratory Development J. Cooper, Purdue 0840-0855 Transfer-Printed Graphene M. Fuhrer, UMD 0855-0910 Nanopatterned Epitaxial W. de Heer, Georgia Tech 0910-0925 RF Millimeter Wave F. Rana, Cornell
0925-1000 BREAK
1000-1015 Graphene for High-Frequency P. Cambell, NRL 1015-1030 Formation of Graphene B. Stoner, RTI 1030-1045 Hybrid Si-Based J. Rowe, NCSU 1045-1100 Wafer Scale K. Wang, UCLA 1100-1115 Heterogeneously Integrable G. Gu, Sarnoff 1115-1130 Molecular Beam R. Kawakami, UC Riverside
1130-1300 LUNCH
RF Devices 1300-1315 High Performance RF T. Tombler, Atomate 1315-1330 THz Graphene M. Field, Teledyne 1330-1345 Templated Vertical T. Fisher, Purdue 1345-1400 Bandgap Engineered J. Moon, HRL ~
1400-1415 Highly-Ordered Array J. Xu, Brown 1415-1430 Carbon Nanotube RF P. Burke, UC Irvine 1430-1445 Carbon-Based Electronics T. Palacios, MIT......, ~
1445-1500 BREAK
1500-1515 Carbon Nanotube Transistor R. Emrick, Motorola,~~~" ~ 1515-1530 Ultra-High Performance J. Woo, UCLA ' 1530-1545 Development of Short Field Y.i~ o.~2 ~4.~ 1545-1600 Graphene-Based mm Wave . Jena, UNO ~ h~v~ 1600-1615 NanoSmartCut . Asbec SO oC7P 1615-1630 Carbon-Based Devices E. Mucciolo, UCF 1630-1645 THz Frequency M. Field, Teledyne 1645-1700 Nanotube and Graphene ~
i1 K. Shepard, Columbia
(J;
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Friday, April 20, 2007
0800-0900
0900-0915 0915-0930 0930-0945 0945-1000 1000-1015
1015-1030
1030-1200
1200-1300
1300-1330 1330-1400 1400-1430
1430-1500
1500-1630
BREAKFAST
Process Integration Graphene Electron Transitioning Carbon Ultra-Low Power Carbon Electronics Carbon Nanotube and Graphene
BREAK
Working Groups
LUNCH
Group 1 Presentation Group 2 Presentation Group 3 Presentation
BREAK
Wrap-Up/Discussionffeam Networking
J. Kedzierski, MIT-LL . hom BAE
H. Zhang, Northr I, Northrop-Grumman
Z. Chen, IBM
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DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20, 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
John Albrecht
AFRLlSND
Bldg 620
WPAFB, OH 45433
Phone: (937) 904-9265
Fax:
E-mail:[email protected]
Peter Asbeck
University of California, San Diego
ECE Dept. MS0407
9500 Gilman Drive
La Jolla, CA 92093
Phone: (858) 534-6713
Fax: (858) 534-0556
E-mail: [email protected]
Chagaan Baatar
Office of Naval Research
875 N. Randolph Street
Code 312
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (703) 696-0483
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Michael J. Biercuk
Booz Allen Hamilton DARPNMTO
3701 N. Fairfax Drive
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (571) 218-4636
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Peter Burke
University of California, Irvine
MS 2625
Irvine, CA 92697
Phone: (949) 824-9326
. Fax: (949) 824-3732
E-mail: pburke@ucLedu
Paul Campbell
Naval Research Laboratory
Code 6876
4555 Overlook Avenue S.W.
Washington, DC 20375
Phone: (202) 767-3414
Fax: (202) 767-1165
E-mail:[email protected];mil
Philip Chang
Booz Allen Hamilton
3811 N. Fairfax Drive
Suite 600
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (703) 816-5991
Fax: (703) 816-5444
E-mail: [email protected]
Zhihong Chen
IBM T.J. Watson Research 1101 Kitchawan Road
Yorktown Heights, NY 10598
Phone: (914) 945-1831
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Page 1 of7
DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20; 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
Brian Cohen Institute for Defense Analyses
4850 Mark Center Drive
Alexandria, VA 20171
Phone: (703) 845-6684
Fax: (703) 845-6848
E-mail: [email protected]
James Cooper
Purdue University
Birck Nanotechnology Center
1205 West State Street
West Lafayette, IN 47907
Phone: (765) 494-3514
Fax: (765) 496-6443
E-mail: [email protected]
Greg Creech
AFRL/SNDI
2241 Avionics Circle
. WPAFB, OH 45433
Phone: (937) 255-4831 (ext: 3486)
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
John Damoulakis
DARPA
3811 N. Fairfax Drive Suite 200
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (703) 812-3718
Fax:
E-mail:[email protected]
Walt De Heer
Georgia Insitute of Technology School of Physics
837 State Street·
Atlanta, GA 30335
Phone: (404) 894-7880
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Rudy Emrick
Motorola
2100 E. Elliot Road
MD: EL375
Tempe, AZ 85284
Phone: (480) 413-5205
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Benjamin Epstein
OpCoast, LLC.
2350 Hooper Avenue
Brick, NJ 08723
Phone: (917) 750-8614
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Mark Field
Teledyne Scientific & Imaging
1049 Camino Dos Rios
Thousand Oaks, CA 91360
Phone: (805) 373-4133
Fax: (805)373-4860
E-mail: [email protected]
Page 2of7
DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20, 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
Timothy Fisher
Purdue University
3337 Covington Street
West Lafayette, IN 47906
Phone: (765) 464-8141
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Mike Fritze
Booz Allen Hamilton
3701 N. Fairfax Drive
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (571) 218-4810
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Michael Fuhrer
University of Maryland
Department of Physics
College Park, MD 20742-4111
Phone: (301) 405-6143
Fax: (301 ) 314-9465
E-mail: [email protected]
Jeffrey Glass
Duke University
Box 90291
Durham, NC 27705
Phone: (919) 660-5431
Fax: (919) 660-5456
E-mail: [email protected]
David Goldhaber
Stanford University.
McCullough Building Room 346
476 Lomita Mall
Stanford, CA 94305
Phone: (650) 725-2047
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Gong Gu
Sarnoff Corporation
201 Washington Road
CN 5300
Princeton, NJ 08543
Phone: (609) 734-2356
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Cynthia Hanson
SPAWAR SysCtr SD
SSC SD, Code 28505
53560 Hull Street
San Diego, CA 92152
Phone: (619) 553-5242
Fax: (619) 553-5297
E-mail: [email protected]
David Janes
Purdue University
1205 West State Street
Box 1006
West Lafayette, IN 47907
Phone: (765) 494-9263
Fax: (765) 494-0811
E-mail:[email protected]
Page 30f7
DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20, 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
Debdeep Jena
University of Notre Dame
275 Fitzpatrick Hall
Notre Dame, IN 46556
Phone: (574) 631-8835
Fax: (574) 631-4393
E-mail: [email protected]
Roland Kawakami
University of California, Riverside
Dept. of Physics and Astronomy
Riverside, CA 92521
Phone: (951) 827-5343
Fax: (951) 827-4529
E-mail: [email protected]
Craig Keast
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
244 Wood Street
LeXington, MA 02420
Phone: (781) 981-7880
Fax: (781) 981-7889
E-mail: [email protected]
Jakub Kedzierski
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
244 Wood Street
Lexington, MA 02420
Phone: (781) 981-2734
Fax: (781) 981-7889
E-mail: [email protected]
Stephen Kilpatrick
Army Research Lab
2800 Powder Mill Road
AMSRD-ARL-SE-RL
Adelphi, MD 20783
Phone: (301 ) 394-0071
Fax: (301) 394-4576
E-mail: [email protected]
Ying Liu
Pennsylvania State University
Department of Physics
University Park, PA 16802
Phone: (814) 863-0090
Fax: (814) 885-3604
E-mail: [email protected]
William Mitchel
Air Force Research Laboratory
AFRlIMLPS 3005 Hobson Way
WPAFB, OH 45433-7707
Phone: (937) 255-9891
Fax: (937) 255-4913
E-mail: [email protected]
Jeong Moon
HRL
3011 Malibu Canyon Road
Malibu, CA 90265
Phone: (31 0) 317-5461
Fax:
E-mail:[email protected]
Page4of7
DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics forRF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20, 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
Eduardo Mucciolo
Dept. of Physics, University of Central Florida
P.O. Box 162385
Orlando, FL 32816
Phone: (407) 823-1882
Fax: (407) 823-1551
E-mail: [email protected]
Tomas Palacios
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
60 Vassar Street
39-567B
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: (805) 453-2436
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Murty Polavarapu
BAE Systems
9300 Wellington Road
Manassas, VA 20110
Phone: (703) 367-1497
Fax: (703) 367-3540
E-mail: [email protected]
Daniel Radack
Institute for Defense Analyses
4850 Mark Center Drive
Arlington, VA 22311
Phone: (703) 845-6842
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Farhan Rana
Cornell University
316 Phillips Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853
Phone: (607) 255-6317
Fax: (607) 254-3508
E-mail:[email protected]
John Rogers
University of Illinois
MRL 2005, MC 230
104 S Goodwin Avenue
Urbana, IL 61801
Phone: (217)244-4979
Fax:
E-mail:[email protected]
James Route
Booz Allen Hamilton
3811 N. Fairfax Drive
Suite 600
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (703) 807-2832
Fax: (703) 816-5444
E-mail: [email protected]
John Rowe
NC State University
Physics Department
Box 8202
Raleigh, NC 27695
Phone: (919) 515-3225
Fax: (919) 513-0670
E-mail: [email protected]
Page 5 of7
DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20, 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
Randy Sandhu
Northrop Grumman
One Space Park
R6-2134
Redondo Beach, CA 90278
Phone: (310) 813-4815 (ext: 34815)
Fax: (310) 812-4378
E-mail: [email protected]
Kenneth Shepard
Columbia University
1300 S.W. Mudd Building
500 W. 120th Street
New York, NY 10027
Phone: (212) 854-2529
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Donald Silversmith
AFOSRlNE
875 N. Randolph Street
Suite 325
Arlington, VA 22044
Phone: (703) 588-1780
Fax: (703) 696-8481
E-mail: [email protected]
Brian Stoner
RTI International
3040 Cornwallis Road
MCNCCampus
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
Phone: (919) 248-1119
Fax: (919) 248-1955
E-mail: stoner@rtLorg
Thomas Tombler
Atomate Corporation
2665-0 Park Center Drive
Simi Valley, CA 93012
Phone: (805) 915-9858
Fax: (805) 435-1951
E-mail: [email protected]
Roger Tsai
Northrop Grumman
1 Space Park .
01/1050
Manhattan Beach, CA 90266
Phone: (31 0) 812-8254
Fax: (310) 813-0418
E-mail: [email protected]
Alberto Valdes
IBM Research
1101 Kitchawan Road, Route 134
MS: 30-116
Yorktown Heights, NY 10601
Phone: (914) 945-2598
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Kang Wang
University of California, Los Angeles
420 Westwood Plaza
66-147B EIV
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Phone: (310) 825-1609
Fax: (310) 206-4685
E-mail: [email protected]
Page 6 of7
DARPAIMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop .Apri I 19·20, 2007
Arlington, VA
Attendance List
Carter White
Naval Research Laboratory
4555 Overlook Avenue S.w.
Washington, DC 20375
Phone: (202) 767-3270
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Kina Wihl
Booz Allen Hamilton
3811 N. Fairfax Drive
Suite 600
Arlington, VA 22203
Phone: (703) 816-5285
Fax: (703) 816-5444
E-mail: [email protected]
Jason Woo
University of California, Los Angeles
56-147J Eng IV
UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
Phone: (31 0) 206-3279
Fax: (310) 206-8495
E-mail: [email protected]
Dwight Woolard
U.S. Army Research Office
P.O. Box 12211
RTP, NC 27709
Phone: (919) 549-4297
Fax: (919) 549-4310
E-mail: [email protected]
JimmyXu
Brown University
184 Hope Street
Box D, Division of Engineering
Providence, RI 02912
Phone: (401) 863-1439
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Hong Zhang
Northrop Grumman
1212 Winterson Road
MS 3B10
Linthicum, MD 21090
Phone: (410) 993-3040
Fax:
E-mail: [email protected]
Chongwu Zhou
University of Southern California
3737 Watts Way#PHE621
Los Angeles, CA 90089
Phone: (213) 740-4708
Fax: (213) 740-8677
E-mail: [email protected]
Page 7 of7
DARPAlMTO Carbon Electronics for RF Applications (CERA) Workshop April 19-20,2007
Arlington, VA
Presenter Biographies
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Materials/Svnthesis 1 Paul Campbell 1 James Cooper 1 Walt de Heer 1 Michael Fuhrer 1 Gong Gu 2 Roland Kawakami _ 2 William Mitchel 2 Farhan Rana , 2 Jack Rowe 3 Brian Stoner 3 Kang Wang 3
RF Devices 4 Peter Asbeck 4 Peter Burke 4 Rudy Emrick 4 Mark Field 4 Timothy Fisher 5 Debdeep Jena 5 Ying Liu 5 Jeong Moon 6. Eduardo Mucciolo 6 Jing Kong 6 Kenneth Shepard 7 Thomas Tombler 7 Jason Woo 7 Jimmy Xu 7
Process Integration , 8 Zhihong Chen 8 Jakub Kedzierski 8 Rick Thompson ~ 8 Roger Tsai , 8 Hong Zhang ~ 9
Materials/Synthesis
Paul Campbell· [email protected] ~ 202-767-3414
Paul M. Campbell was awarded a Ph.D. in physics from the Pennsylvania State University in 1980. He worked at the General Electric Corporate Research and Development (now GE Global Research) Center in Schenectady, NY, from 1980 to 1985, on compound semiconductor materials, processing and devices. In 1985, he joined the Electronics Science and Technology Division of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC, where his research interests have included: III-V MBE; proximal-probe-based nanofabrication; the transport, optical properties, and applications of nanostructures and carbon nanotubes; and most recently the growth, electronic properties, and potential applications of graphene.
James Cooper· [email protected] ·765-494-3514
James A Cooper received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University in 1973. From 1973-83 he was a member 'of technical staff at Bell Laboratories, where he was principal designer for the Bell System's first commercial CMOS microprocessor and developed a time-of-flight technique to investigate high-field electron transport in Si inversion layers. He joined Purdue in 1983, and is now the Charles William Harrison Professor of ECE. Since 1990, his research has centered on novel devices and device technology in SiC. He was elected Fellow ofthe IEEE in 1993, and was a founding co-director of the $58 million Birck Nanotechnology Center at Purdue. .
Walt de Heer . [email protected] . 404-894-7880
Walt de Heer got his Ph.D. in Physics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1985. Currently, de Heer is a Professor ofPhysics at Georgia Institute ofTechnology. His research interests include: Graphitic systems, Electronic properties ofnano-graphitic systems, Field emission, transport and mechanical properties of carbon Nanotubes, Properties and applications ofnanopatterned epitaxial grapheme, Metallic clusters, Elementary magnetic properties of ferro- and para-magnetic cluster systems, Electronic and optical properties ofmetallic clusters, and Phase transitions and novel phases in clusters with correlated electrons.
Michael Fuhrer· [email protected]· 301-405-6143
Michael S. Fuhrer received his B.S. in Physics from the University ofTexas at Austin in 1990. He received his Ph.D. in Physics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1998 after doing research on electronic and thermal transport in High-Tc and fullerene superconductors with Prof. Alex Zett1. Prof. Fuhrer remained at Berkeley as a postdoctoral researcher with Profs. Alex Zettl and Paul McEuen, working on electronic transport in carbon nanotube devices. Prof. Fuhrer joined the faculty at the university of Maryland as an Assistant Professor in 2000, and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2005. Fuhrer's research involves the physics of electronic devices .constructed of nanoscale components, for example individual carbon nanotubes, novel two-dimensional electronic nanostructures, or individual organometallic molecules.
1
Gong Gu . [email protected] . 609-734-2356
Gong Gu is a Member ofTechnical Staff at Sarnoff Corporation. He received his Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering from Princeton University in 1999, and his Bachelor's degree in Electronics Engineering from Tsinghua University in 1991. His Ph.D. research involved transparent, flexible, and full-color organic light-emitting devices (OLEDs). He then joined Sarnoff Corporation, and has worked on the device physics and potential applications of organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs), novel OLED concepts, as well as analog and mixed signal integrated circuit design. His more recent interests include novel semiconductor devices and materials such ,as graphene, heterogeneous integration of silicon and other semiconductors.
.Roland Kawakami' [email protected]· 951-827-5343 ",
Roland Kawakami is a member of the Department ofPhysics and Astronomy at the University of California, Riverside. He received his Ph.D. in 1999 from UC Berkeley under the direction of Z. Q. Qiu in the Physics Department. This research investigated magnetic coupling and anisotropy in ultrathin magnetic multilayers synthesized by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) and probed by magneto-optic Kerr effect and photoemission spectroscopy. Subsequently, he pursued postdoctoral studies at UC Santa Barbara, with D. D. Awschalom and A. C. Gossard to use MBE to develop ferromagnetic semiconductors and ferromagnet/GaAs hybrid structures for spintronic devices. In addition to synthesizing novel materials, ultrafast optical spectroscopy was utilized to investigate unusual spindependent electron reflections in ferromagnet/GaAs structures. Kawakami's research at UC Riverside utilizes MBE synthesis, optical spectroscopy, ~d nanofabrication for the following projects: spin transport in carbon nanotubes, graphite, and graphene, MBE growth of graphene films, MBE synthesis ofMgO magnetic tunnel junctions for memory applications, and ultrafast optical studies of spin . dynamics in semiconductors.
William Mitchel· [email protected]· 937-255~9891
Dr. William Mitchel is Senior Scientist (ST) for Electromagnetic Materials with the Electronic and . \ Optical Materials Branch of the Air Force Research Laboratory. Bill received his Ph.D. in Physics from
the University of Cincinnati and has nearly thirty years of experience in semiconductor physics research.. He is a fellow of the APS and a member ofIEEE, MRS and TMS. His research has covered a wide range of semiconductor materials, from neutron transmutation doped Si and semi-insulating GaAs, through III-V strained layer superlattices, GaN based heterostructures and carbon nanotubes.
Farhan Rana . [email protected] . 607-255-6317
Farhan Rana obtained the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, Cambridge, MA. He worked on a variety ofdifferent topics related to semiconductor optoelectronics, quantum optics, and mesoscopic physics during his PhD research. Before starting his Ph.D., he worked at IBM's T. J. Watson Research Center on Silicon nanocrystal and quantum dot memory devices. He later joined the facility ofElectrical and Computer
2
Engineering at Cornell University, NY in 2003. His current research focuses on semiconductor devices, optoelectronics, and terahertz photonics.
Jack Rowe· [email protected] . 919-515-3225 . .. .
Jack Rowe is currently Research Professor of Physics at NC State University in the Department of Physics and also the Director of the Surface Science Lab at NC State. Previously, he held the position of
. Deputy Director of the UNC Institute for Advanced, Materials, Nanoscience and Technology, where he was also an Adjunct Professor of Physics and Astronomy from late 2003 until early 2007. From 1996 to 2003, he was a Senior Research Scientist (ST) with specialty in Solid State Physics at the Army Research Office (ARO) in Research Triangle Park, NC, where he was in charge of Special Studies in Solid State Physics as a member of the Physics Sciences Directorate. While at ARO, he also was Associate Director of Biological Science Division for -1 ~ years. He is currently studying new methods of epitaxial growth for several Carbon-based systems using hetero-structute film-substrate combinations.
Brian Stoner· [email protected]· 919-248-1119
Brian R. Stoner received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Materials Science from University ofVirginia, Charlottesville, VA in 1987 and 1989, respectively. He earned his Ph.D. in Materials Science in 1992, from North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC. From 1992 until 1998 he joined Kobe Electronic Materials Center in Research Triangle Park, NC where his research centered on epitaxial nucleation and growthofPECVD diamond thin-films for microelectronic applications. In 1998, he joined the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he still holds an Adjunct appointment in Physics and conducts research on carbon nanotube synthesis and devices. In 2000, he joined the Materials and Electronic Technologies Division at MCNC (now Research Triangle Institute), where he is involved in research activities related to Heterogeneous Integration, MEMS based sensors, and Photonics. He also holds an adjunct faculty appointment in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Duke University, where he advises graduate students and conducts research centered on Sensor development, including carbon nanotube synthesis and device characterization.
Kang Wang· [email protected]· 310-825-1609
Kang L. Wang holds Raytheon Professor of Physical Sciences in Electrical Engineering Department at UCLA. He received his Ph.D. degree in 1970 from the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology and was Assistant Professor from 1970 to 1972. From 1972 to 1979, he worked at the General Electric Corporate Research and Development Center. In 1979, Kangjoined the Electrical Engineering Department of the University of California, Los Angeles and served as Chair of that department from 1993 to 1996. In addition to his time at UCLA, he was later the Dean of Engineering from 2000 to 2002 at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He also currently serves as the Director ofFCRP Focus Center on Functional Engineered Nano Architectonics - FENA and was also named the Director of Western Institute ofNanoelectronics (WIN) - a coordinated multi-project Research Institute funded by NRI, Intel and the State of California. Kang was also the founding director of Nanoelectronics Research Facility at UCLA (established in 1989) with the infrastructure to further research in nanotechnology.
3
RF Devices
Peter Asbeck . asbeck@ece~ucsd.edu· 858-534-6713
Peter Asbeck is the Skyworks Chair Professor in the Department ofElectrical and Computer Engineering at UCSD. He attended MIT, where he received the B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in 1969 and in 1975, from the Electrical Engineering Department. He worked at the SamoffResearch Center, Princeton, New Jersey; at Philips Laboratory, BriarcliffManor, New York; and at Rockwell International Science Center, Thousand Oaks, CA, where he was involvedin the development ofhigh-speed devices and circuits using, III-V compounds and heterojunctions. He did pioneering work in the development of heterojunction bipolar transistors based on GaAIAs/GaAs and InAIAs/InGaAs materials. In 1991, Dr. Asbeckjoined the University ofCalifomia at San Diego. His research interests are in development of high-speed heterojunction transistors, nanoscale devices, and their circuit ayplications. He is a Fellow of
. the IEEE, a member of the Defense Science Research Council and of the National Academy of Engineering, and has served as Distinguished Lecturer of the IEEE Electron Device Society and of the . Microwave Theory and Techniques Society.
Peter Burke· pburke@ucLedu . 949-824-9326
Peter J. Burke received the Ph.D. degree in physics from Yale University, New Haven, CT, in 1998. From 1998 to 2001, he was a Sherman Fairchild Postdoctoral Scholar in physics at the California Institute of Technology. Since 2001, he has been a faculty member in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California, Irvine.
.Rudy Emrick· [email protected]· 480-413-5205
Rudy Emrick is a part of Embedded Systems Research which is part ofMotorola Labs, in Tempe, Arizona. He currently manages a team which has capabilities that include electrical characterization, modeling/simulation and development of design methodologies to frequencies as high as 115 GHz. In . early 2006, Rudy gained the added responsibility ofleading Motorola's RF Nanotechnology research. Rudy received his B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Michigan Technological University and his M.S. degree in electrical engineering from The Ohio State University. Rudy is currently working towards his Ph.D. in electrical engineering through The Ohio State University. Rudy also serves on the industrial advisory boards for the multi-university NSF center Connection One ad the Arizona State University Wireless Integrated Nanotechnology (WINTech) Program.
Mark Field· [email protected]· 805-373-4133
Mark Field was awarded a bachelors degree in physics and theoretical physics from the University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, in 1986. After his undergraduate degree he worked for GEC at the Hirst Research Laboratory in Wembley, London, working initially on silicon on insulator transistors and later on telecomrimnications systems. During this time he also completed a masters degree in microelectronics and computer engineering from the University of Surrey, United Kingdom. In 1988, he returned to Cambridge University to study for a Ph.D., performing research into single electron devices
4
in semiconductor microstructures in the semiconductor physics group at the Cavendish laboratory under Professor Michael Pepper. Dr. Field earned the Ph.D. in experimental physics in December 1991 and was awarded a research fellowship at Trinity Hall. This allow~d him to stay on at Cambridge University to do three further years of postdoctoral work on transport in semiconductors.
. ill 1996, he moved to the University of California at Santa Barbara, and worked as a postdoctoral researcher with Professor David Awschalom on magnetic force microscopy of nanoscale magnets. Dr. Field subsequently joined Symyx Technologies, a startup company in Santa Clara, California, where he worked on combinatorial materials science, using high throughput synthesis and measurement to discover new magnetic materials. ill October 2000 Dr. Field joinedTeledyne Scientific (formerly Rockwell) in Thousand Oaks, California as a senior scientist. His currently interests include: nanoscale electronics, spin electronics and IR detectors.
. .
Timothy Fisher ~ [email protected] . 765-494-5627 .
Tiniothy S. Fisher received Ph.D. and B.S. degrees in Mechanical Engineering from Cornell University in 1998 and 1991, respectively. Hejoined Purdue's School of Mechanical Engineering and Birck Nanotechnology Center in 2002 after several years at Vanderbilt University. Prior to his graduate studies, he was employed from 1991 to 1993 as a. design engineer in Motorola's Automotive and Industrial Electronics Group. His research has included efforts in simulation and measurement of nanoscale heat transfer, coupled electro-thermal effects in semiconductor devices, nanoscale direct energy conversion, molecular electronics, microfluidic devices, hydrogen storage, and boundary- and finite-element computational methods. His current efforts include theoretical, computational, and experimental studies focused toward integration ofnanoscale materials with-bulk materials for enhancement of electrical, thermal, and mass transport properties. He serves on the IEEE TC-9 Committee on Thermal Phenomena in Electronics, the ASME K-6 committee on Heat Transfer in Energy Systems, the ASME K-16 Committee on Thermal Management of Electronics, and the illstitute . ofBiological Engineering Council. .
Debdeep Jena . [email protected]· 574-631-8835
Debdeep Jena received the B. Tech. degree in Electrical Engineering from the Indian. Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur in 1998, and the Ph.D. degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) in 2003. He has been an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University ofNotre Dame since 2003. His research and teaching interests are in the MBE growth and device applications of quantum semiconductor heterostructures, investigation of charge transport in nanostructured semiconducting materials such as nanowires and nanocrystals and their device applications, and in the theory of charge, heat, and spin transport in nanomaterials.
Ying Liu ·[email protected]· 814-863-0090
Dr.Ying Liu's main research interests are in the area of condensed matter, materials, and device physics. ill the past several years he has been working on physics of various nanostructures prepared bye-beam lithography and by unconventional means: Dr. Ying Liu received a Ph.D. in Physics from University of Minnesota in 1991, aM. S. in Physics at Institute ofPhysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, in
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1984, and a B.S. in Physics from Peking University, Beijing, in 1982. He joined the facultyof Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University in 1994 after spending three years as a Postdoctoral Research Associate at University of Colorado in Boulder, where he worked on fabrication and characterization ofvarious nanostructures prepared bye-beam lithography. He became a full professor in 2005 and is a fellow of American Physical Society.
Jeong Moon· [email protected] . 310-317-5461
Dr. Jeong Moon is a Senior Research Scientist at HRL Heleceived his B.S. in Physics at Seoul National University, Korea and his Ph.D. from Michigan State Unive~sity in 1995. His thesis work involved experimental noise studies in nano-scaled devices and digital-signal-processing (DSP). He· implemented a complete digital phase-loop-locked detection system based on 16 bit ND and D/A conversion, remarking the world's first complete digital lock-in amplifier. Before joining HRL in 2000, he worked at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, NM, in the area ofnanoelectronics, tunneling transistors, and TeraHertz devices. Their invention of the tunneling transistor was awarded in 1997 Industry Week of the Year. At HRL, he has been focusing on development of emerging . devices/circuits including GaN-based RF devices/circuits, Carbon-based RF electronics, and GaSbbased SPINS devices, quantum computing devices, and optically sensitive quantum structures. He has been a PI for government contracts from ONR, NRO, JPUARO, and NASA. He has authored or coauthored more than 50 technical papers, including numerous conference presentations. He holds 4 patents and 10 patents in pending. .
Eduardo Mucciolo· [email protected]· 407-823-1882
Eduardo Mucciolo has a B.S. andM.S.in Physics from the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. He later got his Ph.n in Physics from MIT and spent two years as a post~doctoral associate at NORDiTA in Denmark (1994-1996). He was Assistant Professor (1996-2002) and Associate Professor (2002-2005) at the Pontifical Catholic University in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Visiting Professor at Duke University (2003). He later performed as Associate Professor of Physics at the University of Central Florida (since 2004), with ajoint appointment in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His research work centers on theoretical condensed matter physics, more specifically electronic transport in low-dimensional structures and quantum computation with solid-state qubits. • .
Jing Kong· [email protected] . 617-324-4068 ~
Jing Kong is currently an Assistant Professor in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Departinent at MIT. She received her Ph.D. and Bachelor's Degree in chemistry fromStanford University, 2002 and Peking University, China, 1997, respectively. Before joining MIT in 2004, she was a research scientist in NASA Ames Research Center and fater a postdoctoral researcher in Delft University, Holland. The researchactivities in her current group involve synthesis of carbon nanotubes and graphene, investigation of their electronic and optical properties and development of functional devices.
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Kenneth Shepard· [email protected]· 212-854-2529
. Kenneth L. Shepard received the B.S.E. degree from Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, in 1987, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Stanford University, Stanford, CA, in 1988 and 1992, respectively. From 1992 to 1997, he was a Research Staff Member and Manager with the VLSI Design Department, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, where he was responsible for the design methodology for IBM's 04 S/390 microprocessors. Since J 997, he has been with Columbia University, New York, NY, where he is now an Associate Professor. He also served as Chief Technology Officer ofCadMqS Design Technology, San Jose, CA, which he co-founded in 1997, until its acquisition by Cadence Design Systems in 2001. His current research interests are broadly in the area ofmixed-signal CMOS design including design tools for advanced CMOS technology, on-chip test and measurement circuitry, low-power design techniques for analog and digital signal processing, 10wpower intrachip communicatiOIls, and nontraditional applications combining CMOS with biotechnology and nanotechnology. 1.
Thomas Tombler . [email protected] . 805-915-9858
Thomas Tom.b1er is the Chief Technology Officer at Atomate Corporation in Simi Valley, CA, where he heads the R&D department in the company. He serves as an instructor at Loyola Marymount University in nanotechnology courses and was an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Chemistry and Biochemistry D'epartment at the University of California, Santa Barbara, from 2003-2006. His research focuses on controlled synthesis of nanostructures, characterization, and fabrication of nanostructure-based devices. Nanomateria1s of interest include carbon nanotubes, metal oxide nanowires,and semiconducting nanowires. His graduate research was in carbon nanotube electromechanical and electrical properties under Professor Hongjie Dai at Stanford University.
Jason Woo· [email protected] ·310-206-3279
Jason C. S. Woo received the B.A. ·Sc. (Hons) degree in engineering science from the University of Toronto, Canada, in 1981, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degreesin electrical engineering from Stanford University in 1982 and 1987, respectively. He joined the department of electrical engineering of UCLA in 1987 and is currently a professor. His research interests are in the physics and technology ofnovel device and device modeling.· .
Jimmy Xu· [email protected]· 401-863-1439
Jimmy Xu is the Charles C. Tillinghast Jr. '32 University Professor, Engineering and Physics at Brown University, and conducts research in quantum and molecular electronics and photonics. Prior to coming to Brown in 1999, he was Director of the Nortel Institute for Telecommunications and held both the James Ham Chair in Optoelectronics and the Nortel Chair of Emerging Technologies at the University ofToronto. He was Editor (compound semiconductors) of IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices (9297), member ofthe editorial board of Institute of Physics Journal of Physics D, and chair of a number of conferences and committees. He currently serves on the Advisory Boards of several companies and of the National Research Council of Canada.
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Process Integration
Zhihong Chen· [email protected]· 914-945-1831
Zhihong Chen received her B.S. degree in physics from Fudan University in 1998, and her Ph.D. degree in physics from the University of Florida in 2003. After two years ofpostdoctoral research at IBM T.J.
. Watson research center, she became a research staffmember in the physical science department. Her research focuses on the electronic properties of carbon based materials, which involves design and . fabrication of high performance devices and circuits.
Jakub Kedzierski· [email protected] . 781-981-2734 .
Jakub Kedzierski received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the Uni~ersity of California at Berkeley in 2001. Following his graduation he worked at IBM's T. J. Watson Research Center on advanced silicon devices. In 2005, Jakub moved to MIT Lincoln Laboratory. His research interests have included: FinFETs, silicon nanowires, fully silicided gates, metal source/drains, and FDSoI technology. Currently Jakub's research efforts are focused on graphene electronics and electrocapillary micfofluidics.
Rick Thompson· [email protected] ··603-885-3119
Mr. Thompson is currently responsible for numerous advanced research and development initiatives at BAE Systems. His recent programs include an RF MEMS development for low cost radios, a photonic CMOS integrated circuit for ultra wide band RF systems, millimeter wave packaging, and TeraHertz sensing. Formerly at TeraConnect, he was the principal architect of a heterogeneous SiGe and GaAs integrated circuit for 150 Gb/s fiber optic data link for backplane, datacom, and telecommunication applications. Rick also worked at Lockheed Martin asa principal investigator for new mixed signal
.technologies. Before that, he began his career at the Mayo Clinic working in the Special Processor Development Group. Mr. Thompson's educational background is a Bachelor of Science in Electronics Engineering from Purdue University (graduated in 1984). Prior to college, Mr. Thompson served his country in the U.S. Air Force as a microwave telecommunications specialist.
Roger Tsai ·[email protected]· 310-812-8254
Roger S. Tsai received a B.S. degree in physics in 1994 and a M.S. degree in electrical engineering from the University ofVirginia, Charlottesville, in 1996, where his graduate research focused on III-V microwave device development for ultra-low power and high speed circuits. He joined Northrop Grumman Space Technology (formerly TRW) in 1996, as a Senior Member of the Technical Staff where he worked on compound semiconductor HEMT technology development, modeling,·and manufactu.Ijng. Currently, he is the program manager for Northrop Grumman's Scalable Millimeterwave Archltectures for ReconfigurableTransceivers (SMART) program under DARPA.· .. J
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Hong Zhang· [email protected]· 410-993-3040
Dr. Zhang, Fellow Scientist at Northrop Grumman, has 20 years of extensive R&D experience in the. areas ofmaterial synthesis, growth, and characterization. Dr. Zhang is leading the technical effort in carbon nanotube RF electronics development at Northrop Grumman and she has particular technical involvement in nanotube growth and processing. Prior to joining NGC, Dr. Zhang was with the Air Force Research Laboratory in WPAFB, OR, where she developed and systematized a novel series of metal nano-clusters and nano-partides useful in nanotechnology and nanofabrication. She was also engaged in the development of nonlinear optical materialscof strategic importance to the U.S. Air Force.
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