L. Jay Guo
University of Michigan
A Decade of Research in Nanoimprint and its Applications
Since its inception 30 years ago, Nanoimprint has become the only alternative to EUV lithography for deep-nanoscale Si electronics. Nanoimprint can go beyond Si chip fabrication and beyond wafer scale applications. This talk summarizes the main effort and outcome in nanoimprint related research at the University of Michigan between 2000-2010.
About L. Jay Guo
L. Jay Guo is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Michigan, where he joined in 1999 after his PhD and postdoc training. He is currently the Director of the Macromolecular Science and Engineering program. Professor Guo’s lab is involved in interdisciplinary research, with activities ranging from polymer-based photonic devices and sensor applications, flexible transparent conductors, nanophotonics, structural colors and AI assisted design, to nanoimprint technologies, and are contributed by students from Electrical Engineering and Optics, Macromolecular Science & Engineering, Applied Physics, Physics, and Mechanical Engineering. Prof. Guo has over 295+ journal publications; with citation more than 35,000 times, and an H-index of 92 (by google scholar). He is a fellow of IEEE and a fellow of Optica. His professional service includes co Editor-in-Chief of Micro and Nano Manufacturing, member of the Editorial Advisory Board of Advanced Optical Materials, and Opto-electric Science. His entrepreneur activities include co-founding two startup companies to commercialize technologies from his lab.
