User:Ching Wen Cheng/沙盒
Shawn-Yu Lin
[编辑]Shawn-Yu Lin | |
---|---|
出生 | Hualien, Taiwan, Taiwan | 1959年10月21日
国籍 | American |
别名 | 林尚佑 |
母校 | Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey |
知名于 | Use of 3D photonic crystals for light trapping on a photonic chip; Use of carbon nanotube array to create the darkest man-made material known to science. |
奖项 | IEEE Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology (2016) |
科学生涯 | |
研究领域 | Semiconductor Physics, Nano-Photonics |
机构 | |
论文 | Magnetotransport, Resonant Tunneling and Far-Infrared laser Spectroscopy of Strained-Layer Semiconductor heterostructures (1992)(1992) |
博士導師 | Daniel C. Tsui |
其他指导者 | Praveen Chaushari. (post doc advisor) |
博士生 |
Shawn-Yu Lin (Chinese: 林尚佑; born October 21, 1959) is a Taiwanese-born American physicist. His work primarily focused on the use of three-dimensional nanostructures [1][2][3] for the control of light propagation on a photonic chip and the alternation of thermal light emission[4][5] beyond the traditional equilibrium environment.
Early life and education
[编辑]He was born on October 21, 1959, in Hualien city, Taiwan. Lin received his High school education in Hualien and attended the National Taiwan University in Taipei for his Bachelor of Science degree. After two years of military service, he came to the United States and attended the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, where he earned a Master of Science degree. Shortly afterwards, he went to Princeton University and earned a doctoral degree in Electrical Engineering. He completed his doctoral work under the supervision of physicist Daniel C. Tsui and was awarded his PhD in 1992.
Career
[编辑]After receiving his doctorate, Lin completed a two and half year post-doctoral fellowship at the IBM Thomas J Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York in the laboratory of Praveen Chaudhari. And later, Lin moved to the State of New Mexico to join the Photonics Department of the Research Division in Sandia National Laboratory, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Five years later, he was awarded the NOVA award (1999), the R&D 100 Award (1999)[6] and the first Asia-American Engineer-of-the-Year Award (2002). Lin returned to New York in 2004 and assumed a newly created Future-Chip Constellation Chair Professor position at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York. Lin is the creator of the darkest man-made material on earth using nanotechnology [7] and was awarded a Guinness World Record for the discovery (2008). Lin received several honors throughout his career, among them fellowship into the American Physical Society (2002), Optical Society of America (2003), American Association for the Advancement of Science (2012) [8], and International Society of Optics & Photonics (2017), as well as the “Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology” [9][10], by the society of IEEE (2016) and the Yu-Shan Scholar by the Ministry of Education, Taiwan (2020). He is affiliated with National Chiao-Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan, as an honorary Distinguished Chair Professor (2004-2021).
References
[编辑]- ^ Photonic lattice. www.sandia.gov. [2021-12-18].
- ^ News Release - Sandia Research. www.sandia.gov. [2021-12-18].
- ^ Photonic crystal confines optical light. www.sandia.gov. [2021-12-18].
- ^ Sandia National Laboratories – News Release: Revolutionary tungsten photonic crystal. newsreleases.sandia.gov. [2021-12-18].
- ^ Martialay, Mary L. Advanced “Super-Planckian” Material Exhibits LED-Like Light When Heated. news.rpi.edu. [2021-12-18] (英语).
- ^ News Release - R&D 100 Awards. www.sandia.gov. [2021-12-18].
- ^ Weiss, Rick. Their Deepest, Darkest Discovery - washingtonpost.com. [2021-12-18]. ISSN 0190-8286 (美国英语).
- ^ American Association for the Advancement of Science (2012).
- ^ Pioneer Award in Nanotechnology. Wikipedia. 2021-01-06 (英语).
- ^ Leibach, Tracey. Creator of Darkest Material on Earth Honored by IEEE. news.rpi.edu. [2021-12-18] (英语).