Department of Materials Science & Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Interests:
Nanoelectronics; Data storage; Energy
Website:
Bio:
Eric Pop is the Pease-Ye Professor of Electrical Engineering (EE) and, by courtesy, of Materials Science & Engineering and Applied Physics at Stanford and SLAC. He is also Senior Fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy and he leads the Heterogeneous Integration focus area of the SystemX Alliance. Before Stanford, he spent several years on the faculty of UIUC, and in industry at Intel and IBM. His research interests include semiconductors, nanoelectronics, data storage, and energy. He received his PhD in EE from Stanford (2005) and three degrees from MIT (MEng and BS in EE, BS in Physics). His honors include the Intel Outstanding Researcher Award, the PECASE from the White House (highest honor given by the US government to early-career scientists & engineers), Young Investigator Awards from the Navy, Air Force, NSF CAREER, DARPA, and several best-paper awards with his students. He is an APS and IEEE Fellow, a Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher, he was Chair of the IEEE Device Research Conference (DRC) and IEEE Non-Volatile Memory Technology Symposium (NVMTS), and he has also served on committees of the APS, MRS, IEDM, and VLSI conferences.
Website:
Bio:
Eric Pop is the Pease-Ye Professor of Electrical Engineering (EE) and, by courtesy, of Materials Science & Engineering and Applied Physics at Stanford and SLAC. He is also Senior Fellow at the Precourt Institute for Energy and he leads the Heterogeneous Integration focus area of the SystemX Alliance. Before Stanford, he spent several years on the faculty of UIUC, and in industry at Intel and IBM. His research interests include semiconductors, nanoelectronics, data storage, and energy. He received his PhD in EE from Stanford (2005) and three degrees from MIT (MEng and BS in EE, BS in Physics). His honors include the Intel Outstanding Researcher Award, the PECASE from the White House (highest honor given by the US government to early-career scientists & engineers), Young Investigator Awards from the Navy, Air Force, NSF CAREER, DARPA, and several best-paper awards with his students. He is an APS and IEEE Fellow, a Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher, he was Chair of the IEEE Device Research Conference (DRC) and IEEE Non-Volatile Memory Technology Symposium (NVMTS), and he has also served on committees of the APS, MRS, IEDM, and VLSI conferences.