MIT EECS faculty candidate# Faculty - 发考题
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From Nanodevices to Nanosystems: The Carbon Nanotube Case Study
Max Shulaker (Stanford University)
January 20, 2015, 11AM, Rm. 36-462 (Allen Rm.)
Bio:
Max Shulaker is a PhD candidate in Electrical Engineering at Stanford
University, under the supervision of Professor Subhasish Mitra and co-
advised by Professor Philip Wong. He received his B.S. from Stanford
University in Electrical Engineering. Max’s current research interests are
in the broad area of nanosystems. His research results include the
demonstration of the first carbon nanotube computer (highlighted on the
cover of Nature, Sept. 2013), the first digital sub-systems built entirely
using carbon nanotube FETs (awarded the ISSCC Jack Raper Award for
Outstanding Technology-Directions Paper, 2013), the first monolithically-
integrated 3D integrated circuits combining arbitrary vertical stacking of
logic and memory (IEDM 2014), and the highest-performance CNFETs to-date (
IEDM 2014). Max also enjoys teaching and has been a guest lecturer in
several classes at Stanford. He is a Fannie and John Hertz Fellow and a
Stanford Graduate Fellow.
Max Shulaker (Stanford University)
January 20, 2015, 11AM, Rm. 36-462 (Allen Rm.)
Bio:
Max Shulaker is a PhD candidate in Electrical Engineering at Stanford
University, under the supervision of Professor Subhasish Mitra and co-
advised by Professor Philip Wong. He received his B.S. from Stanford
University in Electrical Engineering. Max’s current research interests are
in the broad area of nanosystems. His research results include the
demonstration of the first carbon nanotube computer (highlighted on the
cover of Nature, Sept. 2013), the first digital sub-systems built entirely
using carbon nanotube FETs (awarded the ISSCC Jack Raper Award for
Outstanding Technology-Directions Paper, 2013), the first monolithically-
integrated 3D integrated circuits combining arbitrary vertical stacking of
logic and memory (IEDM 2014), and the highest-performance CNFETs to-date (
IEDM 2014). Max also enjoys teaching and has been a guest lecturer in
several classes at Stanford. He is a Fannie and John Hertz Fellow and a
Stanford Graduate Fellow.