Nuo Xu

Nuo Xu was born in Tianjin, China. He received
B.S. Degree from Peking
University in 2008, with his undergraduate research focused on the
Resistive Random Access Memory (RRAM) technology. He received the M.S. and Ph.D. degree
both from Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at University
of California, Berkeley in 2010 and 2012. His doctoral thesis was on the
effectiveness of strain solutions for next-generation MOSFETs. From 2010.6 to 2010.9, he worked in TCAD
group, Synopsys Inc. at
Mountain View, CA, as a Technology CAD engineer. From 2011.7 to 2011.10, he
was with imec
at Heverlee, Belgium, as a visiting scholar. Currently, he is with UC Berkeley, as a
Post-doctoral scholar and visiting faculty member. His research interests include advanced
CMOS transistors and their co-integrations with novel functional devices. He co-taught EE130/230M with Prof. Tsu-Jae
King Liu at UC Berkeley in Spring 2013 semester.
Dr. Xu is the recipient of the 2009 IEEE
Electron Device Society (EDS) Master Student Fellowship Award, the 6th TSMC
Outstanding Student Researcher Gold/Academy Award, and has served as a
reviewer for various IEEE, IET and American Physical Society (APS)
publications.
Contact Information:
E-mail: nuoxu at eecs
dot berkeley dot edu
Mailing Address:
University of California at Berkeley
EECS Department, 253 Cory Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-1770
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- Advanced transistor
technologies for pervasive and mobile computing
- Bio-inspired
electronic devices and systems utilizing neuromorphic
computing principles
- Co-fabrication technologies
for CMOS with novel functional devices
- B.S.
Microelectronics, Peking University (2008)
- M.S. Electrical
Engineering, University of California, Berkeley (2010)
- Ph.D. Electrical
Engineering, University of California, Berkeley (2012)
- UC Berkeley Graduate
Fellowship (2008)
- IEEE Electron Device
Society Master Student Fellowship Award (2009)
- TSMC Outstanding
Student Researcher Award, Gold Prize in Category "Electronic
Device, Process, and Patterning Technologies" (2012)
- TSMC Outstanding
Student Researcher Award, Academy Award (Highest honor among all
categories) (2012)
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