【招博士&博后】明尼苏达大学ECE 邱罡课题组(转载)
原文由 lyclyclyc 发表在 AdvancedEdu 版 >>>
Opportunities for PhD Students and Postdocs in Prof. Gang Qiu's Research Group
Prof. Gang Qiu’s group in the ECE
Department at the University of Minnesota has multiple, fully funded positions
for PhD students and Postdocs starting from Fall 2024. Self-motivated students
with a strong background in Electrical Engineering, Physics, Material Science,
or related fields are welcome to apply. Candidates are encouraged to contact
Prof. Qiu (gqiu@umn.edu) with your CV and apply through the UMN’s PhD program:
https://cse.umn.edu/ece/how-apply-phd. Learn more about the research group at https://sites.google.com/view/gang-qiu/
Biography: Gang Qiu is an incoming
assistant professor in the ECE Department at the University of Minnesota. Prior
to joining UMN, he served as a postdoctoral researcher at UCLA from 2020-2023.
He received his bachelor’s degree in Microelectronics from Peking University in
2014, and his Ph. D. degree in ECE from Purdue University in 2019. He has
authored and co-authored over 60 peer-reviewed journal conference publications
on high-impact journals including Nature Nanotechnology, Nature Electronics,
Physics Review Letters, and Nano Letters etc. His group focuses on experimentally
investigating novel low-dimensional materials and nanostructures to expand the
frontier of classical nanoelectronics, cryogenic electronics, and quantum
technologies. The multi-disciplinary approach aim to address the scalability
issue of both CMOS technologies and quantum computing, meanwhile advancing the
fundamental knowledge spanning from material science, classical semiconductor
devices, and condensed matter physics.
About the department and UMN: University of
Minnesota main campus is located in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul Metropolitan
area, which is among the top 15 most economically vibrant areas across the
country. UMN is renowned for its prestigious engineering program offering world-class
education and research opportunities. According to the latest U.S. News and
World Report, the Electrical Engineering graduate school program ranks No .30
in the US and No. 17 among all the public universities.