美國佛羅里達大學謝會開教授一行到訪北理工開展“21世紀學科前沿”學術(shù)講座活動
發(fā)布日期:2011-05-31 閱讀次數(shù):
供稿、攝影:蘇日娜 編輯:劉娜
5月27日,應(yīng)我校信息與電子學院邀請,美國佛羅里達大學謝會開教授、威斯康星大學麥迪遜分校江洪睿副教授、德克薩斯大學奧斯汀分校張曉晶副教授,新加坡國立大學周光亞博士等一行四人來我校訪問,開展了“21世紀學科前沿”學術(shù)交流之“MEMS前沿技術(shù)研究”講座活動。我校教務(wù)處處長仲順安教授、信息與電子學院院長龍騰教授以及我校100多位師生參加了此次講座。
四位教授為我校師生帶來了一場題為“Microendoscopic 3D Infrared Imaging for Early Cancer Detection”,“Controlled Microfluidic Interfaces and Their Applications”,“Engineering the Future of Healthcare at the Micro and Nano Scale”,“Tuning Photonic Crystal Nanocavities with MEMS”的系列講座。教授們的報告深入淺出,他們用敏銳犀利又不乏幽默的語言,圍繞國際前沿的生物醫(yī)學MEMS、光學MEMS等進行了多角度的分析并介紹了自己所在科研團隊的研究發(fā)展情況。與會師生認真聽取了此次報告,并進行了熱烈的交流。
在交流互動環(huán)節(jié),各位教授用親切幽默的語言為同學們解答了美國文化、美國學生培養(yǎng)、出國留學申請、個人成才、科研方法等問題。通過此次學術(shù)交流活動,與會師生對當今MEMS前沿技術(shù)領(lǐng)域有了更深入的了解,對今后的科研學術(shù)產(chǎn)生了深遠影響。
教授簡介:
謝會開
Huikai Xie is a Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the University of Florida. He received his BS, MS and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Beijing Institute of Technology, Tufts University and Carnegie Mellon University, respectively. Before he joined the University of Florida in 2002, he worked at Tsinghua University (1992-1996), Bosch Corporation (2001), and Akustica Inc. (2002). He has published over 170 technical papers and holds more than 20 US patents. His current research interests include MEMS/NEMS, integrated inertial sensors, sensor interface circuits, microactuators, integrated power passives, CNT-CMOS integration, optical MEMS, biophotonics, IR spectroscopy and miniaturized medical devices. His research has been funded by NIH, NSF, DoD, DoE and NASA as well as several high-tech companies. He also founded or co-founded three startup companies, WiOptix Inc. in Florida, Senodia Technologies in Shanghai, and WiO Technologies in Wuxi, China. He has served on the technical program committees of various international conferences, including the IEEE International Conference on Optical MEMS and Nanophotonics, the IEEE Transducers, and the IEEE Sensors Conference. He is a senior member of IEEE and OSA, and a member of SPIE and ASEE.
江洪睿
Hongrui Jiang received the B.S. degree in physics from Peking University, Beijing, China, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, in 1999 and 2001, respectively. He was a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Berkeley Sensor and Actuator Center, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, from 2001 to 2002. He is currently an Associate Professor with Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, a Faculty Affiliate with the Department of Biomedical Engineering and a faculty member of the Materials Science Program, University of Wisconsin (UW)-Madison, Madison. His research interests are in microfabrication technology, biological and chemical microsensors, microactuators, optical MEMS, smart materials and micro-/nanostructures, lab on a chip and biomimetics and bioinspiration. He received the US National Science Foundation CAREER Award, the US DARPA Young Faculty Award in 2008, and the University of Wisconsin H. I. Romnes Faculty Fellowship.
張曉晶
Dr. Zhang is an Associate Professor at the University of Texas of Austin (UT Austin) in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, with joint affiliations with Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology (ICMB), Microelectronics Research Center and Texas Materials Institute. He received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford University, California in 2004, and was a Research Scientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, before joining the faculty at UT Austin in 2005. Zhang laboratory is developing integrated photonic microsystems (MEMS, micro-electro-mechanical systems), semiconductor chips and nanotechnologies for imaging, sensing and regulating cellular processes critical to healthcare, environmental and defense applications. Dr. Zhang has invented several unique methods to characterize multiscale biology interfaces using silicon photonic sensors on probe. His early efforts to provide massively parallel micrograting embedded cantilevers for force measurement on self-assembled embryos and cells may potentially lead to significant breakthroughs in genetic studies. His current research focus includes: silicon opto-fluidic devices for circulating tumor cells detection and analysis, phase-modulating scanners for in vivo sub-cellular early cancer diagnosis, and quantum dots based near-field imaging nanoscopes to detect, for example, the bio-distributions of drug-delivery nano-carriers in tumor. In addition to being the Principle Investigator of many major grants from federal agencies such as NIH, NSF and DARPA over the past 5 years, Dr. Zhang was also recipient of many prestigious awards, including: the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation Early Career Award for Translational Research in Biomedical Engineering in 2006, the British Council Early Career RXP Award in 2008, NSF Faculty Early Career Development Program (NSF CAREER) Award in 2009-2014 and DARPA Young Faculty Award in 2010.
周光亞
Dr. Zhou received the B.Eng. and Ph.D. degrees in optical engineering from Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, in 1992 and 1997, respectively. He is currently an assistant professor with the Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore. He has published more than 100 research papers in international journals and conferences. His main research interests include microoptics, diffractive optics, MEMS devices for optical applications, and nanophotonics.
(審核:黨華、張笈)