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Posts Tagged ‘Distinguished Service Award’

2021 Nanotechnology Awards Ceremony

Monday, August 9th, 2021

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council announces its 2021 Award Winners. Individual Awards were presented at its 21st IEEE International Conference on Nanotechnology (NANO 2021) held virtually on 28-30 July 2021.

PIONEER AWARD IN NANOTECHNOLOGY

The NTC Pioneer Award in nanotechnology is to recognize individuals who by virtue of initiating new areas of research, development or engineering have had a significant impact on the field of nanotechnology. The award is intended for people who are in the mid or late portions of their careers, i.e., at least 10 years beyond his or her highest earned academic degree on the nomination deadline date.

2021 Pioneer Award Recipient

Prof. Jean-Pierre Leburton, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

“For pioneering contribution to the theory and simulation of semiconductor nanostructures and low dimensional nanoscale devices.”

Jean-Pierre Leburton received his Ph.D. from the University of Liege (Belgium) in 1978. He is a professor in the UIUC Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and a research professor in the Holonyak Micro- and Nano-Technology Laboratory and in the Coordinated Science Laboratory. He is also Professor of Physics at UIUC.

Professor Leburton’s expertise is the theory and simulation of nanoscale semiconductor devices and low-dimensional systems. His research focuses more specifically on transport and optical processes in semiconductor nanostructures such as quantum wells, quantum wires and quantum dots. Current research projects involve electronic properties of self-assembled dots for high performance lasers, single-electron charging and spin effects in quantum dots, modeling of nanocrystal floating gate flash memory devices, nanoscale Si MOSFET’s and carbon nanotubes and graphene nanostructures. His research deals also with dissipative mechanisms involving electron-phonon interaction in nanostructures for mid- and far-infrared intra-band lasers. Approaches to these problems involve use of sophisticated numerical techniques such as Monte-Carlo simulation and advanced 3D self-consistent Schroedinger-Poisson model including non-equilibrium transport for full scale nanodevice modeling.In the last 18 years, he turned his interest toward the interaction between living systems and semiconductors to investigate programming and sensing biomolecules with nanoelectronics.

 

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2021 NTC Award Winners Announced

Saturday, November 14th, 2020

Hearty congratulations to the following 2021 NTC Award Winners! Stay tuned for further details about the Awards Ceremony.

Pioneer Award
The Pioneer Award recognizes individuals who have had a significant impact on the field of nanotechnology by virtue of initiating new areas of research, development or engineering.

  • Professor Jean-Pierre Leburton
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
    “For pioneering contribution to the theory and simulation of semiconductor nanostructures and low dimensional nanoscale devices.”

Early Career Awards
The Early Career Award recognizes individuals who have made contributions with a major impact on the field of nanotechnology.

  • Professor Max Shulaker
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    “For his pioneering work in carbon nanotubes and the broad area of nano-systems, including nanofabrication technologies, nanodevices, circuits, and architectures.”
  • Dr. Myeong-Lok Seol
    NASA Ames Research Center
    “For innovative contributions to the development of triboelectric power generation and printed supercapacitors for space missions.”

Distinguished Service Award
The Distinguished Service Award recognizes an individual who has performed outstanding service for the benefit and advancement of the Nanotechnology Council.

  • Professor John Yeow
    University of Waterloo
    “For distinguished service, including accomplishments as an Editor-in-Chief of the IEEE Nanotechnology Magazine and other service achievements.”

To view the full detailed listing of each award please visit the Awards page on our website. Nominations are due on 1 October of each year. Nominators should utilize the forms associated with each award description found here. For further information, please contact the Awards Committee Chair.

 

NTC 2019 Award Winners

Friday, August 9th, 2019

NTC 2019 Awardees

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council announces its 2019 Award Winners. Awards were presented at its 19th IEEE International Conference on Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO 2019) held in Macau, China on 22-26 July 2019. The Council recognized recipients for  its Pioneer, Early Career  and Distinguished Service Awards, presented by the Council President, Prof. Tommy Tzeng.

The recipient of the 2019 IEEE Nanotechnology Council Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology, is Paul S. Weiss, UC Presidential Chair and Distinguished Professor of Chemistry & Biochemistry and of Materials Science & Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles. The recipient for the 2019 IEEE Nanotechnology Council Early Career Award is Professor Han Wang at the University of Southern California. The recipient for the 2019 IEEE Nanotechnology Council Distinguished Service Award is Professor Fabrizio Lombardi at Northeastern University, Boston.

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2017 Awards Ceremony

Sunday, August 13th, 2017

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council 2017 Awards Ceremony was held in conjunction with the IEEE NANO 2017 banquet in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (USA) on July 27.

The Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology recipient was Paras N. Prasad, Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, Physics, Medicine and Electrical Engineering, at the University at Buffalo (NY). The Early Career Award in Nanotechnology recipient was Professor Duygu Kuzum of the Jacobs School of Engineering at the University of California, San Diego. The Distinguished Service Award recipient was Dominic Massetti of OmniVision Technologies, Inc., Seal Beach, CA.

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2017 NTC Award Winners Announced

Tuesday, May 9th, 2017

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council announces its 2017 Award Winners. Awards will be presented at its flagship IEEE International Conference on Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO) being held July 25 to 28, 2017 in Pittsburgh, PA (USA).

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2016 Awards Ceremony

Saturday, August 27th, 2016

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council 2016 Awards Ceremony was held in conjunction with the IEEE NANO 2016 banquet in Sendai, Japan on August  24.

The Pioneer award in Nanotechnology recipient is Shawn-Yu Lin, Professor of Physics, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York. The Early Career Award in Nanotechnology co-recipients are, from academia, Prof. Tak Sing Wong, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, the Pennsylvania State University, and from government, Jin-Woo Han, Research Scientist, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffet Field, Calif. The Distinguished Service Award recipient is Edward G. Perkins, consultant, Tualatin (Portland metro area), Ore.

NTC Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology

NANO2016 Pioneer Awardee LinThe NTC Pioneer Award in nanotechnology is to recognize individuals who by virtue of initiating new areas of research, development or engineering have had a significant impact on the field of nanotechnology. The award is intended for people who are in the mid or late portions of their careers, i.e., at least 10 years beyond his or her highest earned academic degree on the nomination deadline date.

 The 2016 recipient of the IEEE NTC Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology is Shawn-Yu Lin, who is a Professor of Physics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. His award citation states: “For pioneering contribution to the development of 3D optical photonic-crystals and the discovery of the darkest nano-material on earth”.

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2016 NTC Award Winners Announced

Friday, May 20th, 2016

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council announces its 2016 Award Winners. Awards will be presented at its flagship IEEE International Conference on Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO) being held August 22 to 25, 2016 in Sendai, Japan.

Early Career Award

The Early Career Award recognizes individuals who have made contributions with major impact on the field of nanotechnology. Up to two awards may be given per year. There may be one award for academics (persons employed by colleges or universities) and one for persons employed by industry or government organizations.

Prof. Tak Sing Wong
Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Pennsylvania State University
tswong@psu.edu

Citation: “For significant contributions to the field of biologically inspired surface nanoengineering”

 

Jin-Woo Han
Research Scientist
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffet Field, CA
jin-woo.han@nasa.gov

Citation: “For innovative contributions to the development of nanoelectronics, devices, and nanosensors”

 

Pioneer Award

The Pioneer Award in nanotechnology is to recognize individuals who by virtue of initiating new areas of research, development or engineering have had a significant impact on the field of nanotechnology.

Shawn-Yu Lin,
Professor of Physics
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
sylin@rpi.edu

Citation: “For pioneering contribution to the development of 3D optical photonic-crystals and the discovery of the darkest nano-material on earth”

 

Distinguished Service Award

The Distinguished Service Award recognizes an individual who has performed outstanding service for the benefit and advancement of the IEEE Nanotechnology Council.

Edward G. Perkins
Consultant
e.perkins@ieee.org

Citation: “For excellence as the IEEE Nanotechnology Council Secretary and outstanding contributions to the Council’s conference activities”

 

2012 Awards Presented

Thursday, August 23rd, 2012

Birmingham, UK (23 August 2012) – The IEEE Nanotechnology Council (NTC) presented its 2012 Awards at the 2012 International Nanotechnology Conference (NANO) gala dinner held August 22 at the University of Birmingham’s Great Hall.

NTC President Stephen Goodnick presented the Pioneer Award to Professor Joseph W. Lyding of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the Distinguished Service Award to Professor Ning Xi of Michigan State University, and the Early Career Award to Sayeef Salahuddin of the University of California at Berkeley.

Awardees Sayeef Salahuddin and Ning Xi; Stephen Goodnick (IEEE NTC President), Kyle Jiang (NANO 2012 Chair, University of Birmingham), and awardee Joseph Lyding

Professor Lyding received his award “For advances in atomic resolution nanofabrication and discovery of the giant deuterium isotope effect and its application to CMOS technology.” Lyding received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University in 1983. He is a professor in the University of Illinois  Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and a full-time faculty member in the Nanoelectronics and Nanomaterials group. His fields of professional interest are scanning tunneling microscopy, nanofabrication, nanoelectronics, and IC chip reliability.

Dr. Lyding has received many honors: DARPA Excellent Performance Citation (1998); Philips Visiting Scholar, Haverford College (1998); University Scholar, UIUC (1997); Fellow of American Physical Society (1997); Associate, UIUC Center for Advanced Study (1996-97); IBM Partnership Award (1996-97); Fellow, UIUC Center for Advanced Study (1987-88); Arnold O. Beckman Award, UIUC (1988, 1985, 1984); Tau Beta Pi Outstanding Teaching Award (1984); ACS Arthur K. Doolittle Award (1983); IBM Postdoctoral Fellowship (1983).

Lyding’s research focus is on carbon nanoelectronics, based on carbon nanotubes and graphene for future semiconducting device applications and understanding their interactions with technological substrates at the atomistic level. This includes ultra-clean nanotube deposition and STM spectroscopic methodologies and modeling of subtle effects with first principles theory and simulations.

Professor Xi received his award “For dedicated and distinguished service to IEEE NTC as an Elected Officer”. Xi received his D.Sc. degree in Systems Science and Mathematics from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri in December, 1993. He received his M.S. degree in Computer Science from Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, and the B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Currently, he is the John D. Ryder Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Michigan State University.

Dr. Xi received the Best Paper Award in the IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems in August, 1995. He also received the Best Paper Award in the 1998 Japan-USA Symposium on Flexible Automation. Dr. Xi was awarded the first Early Academic Career Award by the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society in May, 1999. In addition, he is also a recipient of National Science Foundation CAREER Award. He served as President of the IEEE Nanotechnology Council from 2010-2011, and prior to that President Elect and Vice President for Publications.

Xi’s research interests include robotics, manufacturing automation, micro/nano systems, and intelligent control and systems.

Professor Salahuddin received his award “For contributing to the understanding of the physics of hetero-interfaces in nanostructures and investigating their use for energy efficient applications”.  Salahuddin received his B.Sc. in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from BUET (Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology) in 2003 and the Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Purdue University in 2007. He joined the faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the University of California, Berkeley in 2008.

Dr. Salhuddin received the Kintarul Haque Gold Medal from BUET in 2003, the Meissner Fellowship from Purdue University, 2003-4, an IBM PhD Fellowship 2007-8, a MARCO/FCRP Inventor Recognition Award in 2007, a UC Regents Junior Faculty Fellowship in 2009, a Hellman Faculty Fellowship in 2010, a DOE NISE award in 2010, and the 2011 NSF CAREER award.

Salhuddin’s research interests are in the interdisciplinary field of electronic transport in nano structures, currently focusing on novel electronic and spintronic devices for low power logic and memory applications. Professor Salahuddin has championed the concept of using ‘interacting systems’ for switching, showing fundamental advantage of such systems over the conventional devices in terms of power dissipation.

2012 NTC Awards Announced

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012

The IEEE Nanotechnology Council (NTC) announces and congratulates the winners of our 2012 Awards approved at its February 2012 Executive Committee Meeting in Phoenix.

The awards and winners are:

Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology:

Joseph W. Lyding, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois

“For advances in atomic resolution nanofabrication and discovery of the giant deuterium isotope effect and its application to CMOS technology.”

Distinguished Service Award:

Ning Xi, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Michigan State University

“For dedicated and distinguished service to IEEE NTC as an Elected Officer”

Early Career Award in Nanotechnology:

Sayeef Salahuddin, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California Berkeley

“For contributing to the understanding of the physics of hetero-interfaces in nanostructures and investigating their use for energy efficient applications”

The awards will be presented at the upcoming 12th International Conference on Nanotechnology 20-23 August 2012, in Birmingham England.