Dr. Bernard Didier F. Casse
Bernard Didier F. Casse, Ph.D. is Lead Research Scientist in
experimental nano-optics at the Electronic Materials Research Institute
(eMRI) in Northeastern
University, Boston MA.
His research thrust
includes high-visibility projects such as engineering nanoscale
negative-index photonic crystals (or metamaterials) for optical
communication, subwavelength resolution imaging, trapping light, and
more
recently solar energy, as well as micromanufacturing
military-significant antennas. His latest work on ultra-short focal
length nano-optical microlens for high-pixel count digital imaging,
published in Applied Physics Letters, has been featured in Nature and
received substantial
media coverage. He has recently demonstrated a
photonic crystal superlens, in optics, capable of beating the
diffraction limit.
In earlier years, at the Singapore Synchrotron Light Source (SSLS), he
produced the first full-fledge THz microfabricated metamaterial,
and pioneered the fabrication of truly 3D metamaterials and multilayered
resonator structures using X-ray lithography. The micro-metamaterials
resonators that were manufactured made the cover of the first issue of
the Advances in Synchrotron Radiation (asr) Journal. Furthermore he was
involved in foundry services, at the light source, and played a key role
in successfully delivering several high-tech commercial projects for
world-renowned companies and world-class research institutions. He also
fabricated the premier proton beam micromachined scaffolds for future
tissue engineering applications at the Center for Ion Beam Applications
(CIBA) in Singapore.
Didier is an expert in high-end nanolithography and optics. He is a
qualified super-user of the Center for Nanoscale Systems (CNS) in
Harvard university and the NSF Center for High-rate Nanomanufacturing
(CHN). He has the highest level of expertise in nanofabrication in
cleanroom environment and mastered an extensive repertoire of advanced
optical and metrology equipment including synchrotron radiation beamline
optics.
Didier has close to 30 peer-reviewed
publications, in the
areas of nanotechnology and metamaterials, in high-impact factor
journals including Physical Review Letters, Applied Physics Letters,
Tissue Engineering, Nuclear Instruments & Methods B, Nanotechnology, and
Advances in Synchrotron Radiation. He is also an official ad hoc referee
for the reputable journals “Applied Physics Letters”, “Journal of
Applied Physics”, and “Physical Review Letters”.
He has close to
15
technical talks in the U.S. and internationally. He recently
delivered an invited talk at the SPIE Optics+Photonics
(NanoScience+Engineering 2008) in San Diego, CA and was invited earlier
to co-chair a session in Nanoscale Electromagnetics/Photonics/Plasmonics
at the Progress In Electromagnetics Research Symposium (PIERS 08) in
Cambridge, MA. His latest awards include being listed in Marquis Who’s
Who in America (2009 Edition); Who’s Who in the World (25th Silver
Anniversary Edition 2008), Best Poster Award (MRS FALL Meeting 2007),
and
Best paper award in Asia-Pacific Conference of Transducers and
Micro-Nano Technology (2006).
Didier possesses advanced knowledge of numerical computations,
modeling and simulations. He has significant experience in utilizing
advanced electromagnetic solvers, Unix-based platforms and other
esoteric software. Armed with extensive knowledge of C/Perl/Python, he
contributes codes to open source software in his spare time. He also
used to maintain a Fedora Linux YUM repository of the
enlightenment DR17
desktop shell.
He earned his doctoral degree in Physics (specialized in
micro-/nano engineering of metamaterials) in 2007 from the prestigious
National University of Singapore, which falls in the same league as the
U.S. top universities. He has been a researcher at Northeastern
University since October 2006. He is a member of the American Physical
Society (APS), the American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS), the Materials Research Society (MRS), the National Postdoc
Association (NPA), and the High IQ Society.
Read
Northeastern University Physicists Develop Nano-Optical Lens
and
3D nanotube assembly technique for nanoscale
electronics.