Dr. Zhenqiang “Jack” Ma
The MIT Technology Review article Record-Breaking Speed for Flexible Silicon: A new method of making ultrathin transistors could pave the way to flexible and wearable electronics. said
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, have made ultrathin silicon transistors that operate more than 50 times faster than previous flexible-silicon devices. The advance could help make possible flexible high-end electronics that would be useful in a variety of applications, from computers to communication.
Zhenqiang (Jack) Ma, professor of electrical and computer engineering and lead researcher on the project, is interested in using flexible electronics to redesign large-scale antennas that could be molded in the shape of, say, an airplane. For instance, radar antennas could be made to cover a large area on an airplane, he says, increasing sensitivity and area of coverage.
Zhenqiang “Jack”
Ma, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at University of Wisconsin-Madison. He
received
his B.S. degree in applied physics and the B.E. degree in
electrical
engineering from
Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, in
1991, and
the M.S. degree in nuclear science and the M.S.E. and Ph.D.
degrees
in electrical engineering from the
University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor in 1997, and 2001, respectively. His doctoral research
focused on
the development of SiGe power heterojunction bipolar
transistors
(HBTs) for high frequency microwave
applications.
In June
2001, Jack
joined the R&D team of
Conexant Systems and later its
spin-off Jazz Semiconductor, Newport Beach, CA, where he worked
on
the
development, characterization, and modeling of high-speed
SiGe HBTs.
In August 2002, he left Jazz to join the faculty of
University of
Wisconsin-Madison, as an Assistant Professor in the
Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering.
His
research interests
include
high-speed flexible electronics and flexible RF, flexible
photodetection and imaging, Si/Ge optoelectronics and
photonics for
high-speed multispectral imaging, high-speed and high-power
SiGe and
III-HBT/FET device physics and technologies, RF circuits,
monolithic microwave and millimeter wave integrated
circuits,
reliability of devices and circuits, Si and SiGe strained
materials
and physics, novel heterogeneous integration schemes, and
nanoscale
devices. He is the author of 100 peer-reviewed technical
papers
related to his research.
His inventions include
PIN Diodes for Photodetection and High-Speed, High-Resolution Image
Sensing,
Method for Double-Sided Processing of Thin Film Transistors,
High-Power-Gain, Bipolar Transistor Amplifier, and
Solid-State High Frequency High Power Device. Read the full list of
his inventions!
Jack was the Technical
Program Co-Chair of the
IEEE
Topical Meeting on Silicon Monolithic Integrated Circuits
in RF
Systems (2006). He currently serves on the
Executive
Steering
Committee for the IEEE Topical
Meeting on Silicon Monolithic Integrated Circuits in RF
Systems.
He is elected Conference Chair of 2008
IEEE Topical Meeting on Silicon Monolithic Integrated
Circuits in RF
Systems to be held in Orlando, FL.
He served as a Technical Reviewer of Elsevier
Superlattices and
Microstructures, Semiconductor Science and
Technology, Electrochemical
and Solid-State Letters, Journal of Physics D:
Applied Physics,
IEE Electronics Letters, Electronics,
Telecommunications Research Institute Journal, IEEE
Microwave, Wireless
Components Letters, IEEE Transactions on Electron
Devices,
Solid-State Electronics, International Journal of
Electronics, IEEE
Transactions On Circuits And Systems-II: Express
Briefs,
IEEE Transactions On Nanotechnology, and IEEE
Transactions on
Nuclear
Science.
Jack coauthored
On the scaling of emitter stripes of SiGe power HBTs,
SiGe HBT linearity comparison between CE and CB
configurations,
High-speed strained-single-crystal-silicon thin-film transistors on
flexible polymers,
A high power and high gain X-band Si/SiGe/Si heterojunction bipolar
transistor,
Base region optimization of SiGe HBTs for high-frequency microwave
power amplification,
and
Aluminum metallization for flat-panel displays using
ion-beam-assisted
physical vapor deposition.
Read his
full list of publications!
He
was
featured in MIT’s
Technology
Review magazine
for his innovation on Si power devices in 2004 and for
flexible
electronics innovation in 2006. He was also featured in the McGraw-Hill
Encyclopedia of Science & Technology for his
strained
flexible
chips in 2006.