IEEE Santa Clara Valley 
Solid State Circuits Society




Previous Event

Abstract

The Stanford Nanofabrication Facility is part of the SNF's National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network. It is a research and development facility with a wide variety of semiconductor processing equipment that is open to external use. In a typical month, there are 200 users of the facility comprised of 120 Stanford graduate students, 20 students and faculty from other universities, and 60 industrial users, primarily from start-up companies. Projects in the lab come from the study of MEMS/NEMS, bio-MEMS/NEMS, sensors/actuators, nanotubes/nanowires, semiconductor materials and device research, magnetic technology, photonic devices and many other fields.

Biography

Paul Rissman is the Director of Research Operations of the Stanford Nanofabrication Facility at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. His undergraduate and graduate education was in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. Paul worked 26 years in the semiconductor industry, including 2 years at Amdahl Corporation, 20 years at Hewlett Packard, and 4 years at LSI Logic, serving in various management positions for the last 19 years. He has 26 publications, 4 patents granted, 2 patents filed, and 2 patents disclosed in the fields of semiconductor processing, electron beam lithography, superconducting junction technology and other fields.



SSC Technical meetings of SCV are typically held on The THIRD Thursday of each month at:

National Semiconductor Building 31 Auditorium
955 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, CA
  Directions

Refreshments are provided at 6:00 PM and the talk typically starts at 6:30 PM.
  Donation requested to partially cover food cost

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