The impact of nanotechnology on sensing: critical review and perspectives

Wednesday, Nov 4, 10:00 - 10:50 CET


Paolo Lugli Paolo Lugli Libera Università di Bolzano, Italy

Paolo Lugli

Libera Università di Bolzano, Italy


ABSTRACT

Over the last decades, nanotechnology has strongly impacted the scientific world and affected they way we live and produce. The talk will focus on the area of sensing, showing the main advances that nanotechnology has introduced. In particular, the emerging field of flexible and printed electronics will be discussed, which has brought valuable alternatives and applications with respect to conventional electronics and which can be very appealing from a sustainability point of view.


SPEAKER BIO

Paolo Lugli graduated in Physics at the University of Modena, Italy, in 1979. In 1981 he joined Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, where he received his Master of Science in 1982 and his Ph.D. in 1985, both in Electrical Engineering. From 1988 to 1993 he was Associate Professor of “Solid State Physics” at the “Engineering Faculty” of the 2nd University of Rome “Tor Vergata”. In 1993 he was appointed as Full Professor of “Optoelectronics” at the same University. In 2002 he joined the Technical University of Munich where he was appointed head of the newly created Institute for Nanoelectronics. From 2015 to 2016 he was Dean of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at TUM. In January 2017 he became Rector of the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano in Bolzano, Italy. His current research interests involve printed electronics, nanoimprint lithography, the modeling, fabrication and characterization of organic devices for electronics and optoelectronics applications, the design of circuits and architectures for nanostructures and nanodevices, the numerical simulation of microwave semiconductor devices, and the theoretical study of transport processes in nanostructures. He is author of more than 450 scientific papers and co-author of the books "The Monte Carlo Modelling for Semiconductor Device Simulations" (Springer, 1989) and “High Speed Optical Communications“ (Kluver Academic, 1999). He served as General Chairman of the IEEE International Conference on Nanotechnology held in Munich in 2004 and as Program Chair of the same conference held in Rome in 2015. He is IEEE Fellow and member of the German National Academy of Science and Engineering (ACATECH)


TECHNICAL SPONSOR


IEEE Instrumentation and Measurement Society
Italy Section
ieee_sensors
Italy Section SEN Chapter


With the Patronage of


mipaaf
provinciaautonoma
trentocomune
unisannio
aiam
Aiia
gmee
gmmt
carmelo
aivela


Sponsored By


Niris
Sensors
Meter Group
Setel
Setel