About

JP_selfJeongwon Park

Associate Professor,  Ph.D., SMIEEE

ARC 541 (Office: 613 562 5800    ext. 6679), Lab: ARC 529

Work E-mail: jpark2@uottawa.ca, jepark@unr.edu

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeongwon-park-582a809/

https://uniweb.uottawa.ca/?lang=en#!uottawa/members/1704

 Jeongwon Park joined the University of Ottawa, as an Associate Professor at the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in July 2016, and a Senior Member IEEE. His expertise is in the areas of nanotechnology-enabled flexible hybrid electronics, nano-photonics, emerging nano-electronics, III-V semiconductor, Silicon CMOS device fabrication, and ‘beyond-CMOS’ devices with low-dimensional nano-materials including CNT and graphene.

Prior to that, Jeongwon was a scientist at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford University from 2014 to 2016. At SLAC, he developed and implemented nanofabrication and microfabrication methods for advanced x-ray optics and nano-photonic devices at the Stanford Nano Center, Stanford Nanofabrication Facility, and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

Dr. Park has worked closely with different industrial partners. For six years, he served as a senior technologist to support the corporate Chief Technology Officer (CTO) and business units at Applied Materials, US. He also actively worked with Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) as an industrial mentor, liaison and proposal reviewer for overall SRC research strategies.

Jeongwon has been a guest researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories (LBL, NCEM), a visiting scholar in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, and an adjunct professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Santa Clara since 2009. He received his Ph.D. (2008) in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of California, San Diego. During his Ph.D., he focused on nano-electronics with carbon nanotubes and organic field effect transistors including fabrication within a clean room, experience with CMOS, MEMS, packaging, device processing/measurements, simulations and modeling tools. Jeongwon’s current research interests include nano-technology-enabled flexible hybrid electronics and sensors.