David Seiler
Chief, Semiconductor Electronics
NIST
Talk Title: Welcoming Remarks
Biographical Sketch
David G. Seiler is the Chief of the Semiconductor Electronics
Division in
the Electronics and Electrical Engineering Laboratory
at NIST. The Division
provides leadership in developing the semiconductor measurement
infrastructure essential to improving U.S. economic competitiveness.
It
provides necessary measurements, physical standards, and
supporting data and technology; associated generic technology;
and fundamental research results to industry, government,
and academia. The primary mission of the Division is to
provide the measurement infrastructure to U.S. industry
for mainstream silicon CMOS (complementary metal-oxide
semiconductor) technology. The Division's programs also
respond to industry measurement needs related to MicroElectroMechanical
Systems (MEMS), power electronics, and various sub-areas
of nanotechnology including nanoelectronics, nanocharacterization,
nanobiotechnology, and plastic electronics.
Dr. Seiler received his Ph. D. and M.S. Degrees in Physics
from Purdue
University and a B.S. in Physics from Case Western Reserve
University. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society
and a senior member of the Institute of Electrical and
Electronic Engineers (IEEE). In 2000, he
received a Distinguished Alumni Award from Purdue University's
School of
Science for his contributions and achievements in semiconductors.
Over the past 36 years he has developed an extensive research
background in many areas of semiconductor physics. He
has worked with the characterization of the electrical,
optical, and nonlinear optical properties of numerous
semiconductors and artificially structured materials,
concentrating on quantum transport effects, two-photon
absorption spectroscopy, and magneto-optical effects.
His current focus is on understanding and advancing the
metrology and characterization measurements needed by
the semiconductor industry. The results of his research
have been disseminated in over 200 publications and 100
talks throughout the world.
Dr. Seiler is and has been integrally involved in a wide
variety of
important activities for the semiconductor community which
include:
contributing towards all three versions of the Semiconductor
Industry
Association's National Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors
(NTRS) in 1991, 1994, and 1997, as well as the International
Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) in 1999;
being a member of International SEMATECH's Analytical
Lab Managers Working Group; planning and carrying out
two industrial surveys on characterization measurements
for HgCdTe and optical characterization methods for the
semiconductor industry; holding the positions of chairman
and vice chairman of the IRIS Specialty Group on Infrared
Materials (1990-95); holding the position of Recording
Secretary for the American Society for Testing and Materials
Committee F-01 on Electronics (ASTM, for 1996-97); and
holding membership in numerous program evaluation and
reviewer panels. He serves on the executive committee
of the Manufacturing Science and Technology Group of the
American Vacuum Society and on the IEEE Electron Device
Society's Regions/Chapters Committee, and was recently
elected as Vice Chair of the American Physical Society's
Topical Group on Instrument and Measurement Science.
Dr. Seiler has been Chairperson and Proceedings Editor
of seven International Conferences or Workshops: Hot Electrons
in Semiconductors in 1977, Narrow Gap Semiconductors in
1989, HgCdTe Characterization
International Workshop in 1992 (see Vol. 8, No. 6S, of
the June 1993 issue of Semiconductor Science and Technology),
International Workshop on Semiconductor Characterization:
Present Status and Future Needs in 1995, The International
Conference on Materials and Process characterization for
VLSI in 1997, and both the 1998 and the 2000 International
Conference on Characterization and Metrology for ULSI
Technology. He is the co-editor and a co-author of a chapter
in Vol. 36 of Semiconductors and Semimetals (1992) and
is a co-author of the chapter "Optical Properties
of Semiconductors" in the McGraw Hill Handbook of
Optics (1995). Additionally, he is a co-editor of journals
and books containing the proceedings from seven different
international conferences and/or workshops. He has been
a member of the editorial Sub-Board for the journal Semiconductor
Science and Technology. He is also a member of American
Association for the Advancement of Science, Materials
Research Society, American Physical Society, American
Vacuum Society, IEEE, ASTM, Sigma Pi Sigma, and Sigma
Xi.
Prior to joining NIST in 1988, Dr. Seiler served as a
Solid State Physics
Program Director in the Materials Research Division at
the National Science Foundation, spent a year's sabbatical
at the MIT Francis Bitter National Magnet Laboratory,
and had been a Regents Professor of Physics at the University
of North Texas. Prior to becoming Division Chief, he served
as the Materials Technology Group Leader in the Division
and as a Program Analyst in the Program Office for the
Director of NIST.
URL: http://www.eeel.nist.gov/812/dgs.htm
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