The Center for Quantum Devices in the News by    
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326.  
High Powered Laser on a Chip
High Powered Laser on a Chip
Inside R&D - October 8, 1993
Researchers at Northwestern University have discovered a way to make high-powered aluminum free lasers on a computer chip. Test on bench versions of he new lasers show them to be more reliable and stable than the best results ever reported for the aluminum-based chips. The lasers should also be simple to produce, easy to operate, and provide a high power density. ... [read more]
 
327.  
New Optoelectronics Chip Built at Northwestern
New Optoelectronics Chip Built at Northwestern
McCormick Dimension - September 1, 1993
Researchers at Northwestern University have succeeded in building what are believed to be the most precise and long-lasting lasers ever constructed on a silicon base. The achievement is an important step toward the marriage of electronics and photonics on a single chip. ... [read more]
 
328.  
Next Generation Laser Diodes: Aluminum Free
Next Generation Laser Diodes: Aluminum Free
Optics & Photonics News - September 1, 1993
If research at Northwestern University is successful, aluminum-free laser diodes may be on the shelves in the next several years. Manijeh Razeghi, director of Northwestern's Center for Quantum Devices, leads a team investigating InGaAsP/InGaP/GaAs doubble heterostructure laser diodes grown using metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) ... [read more]
 
329.  
Northwestern Opens Center for Quantum Devices
Northwestern Opens Center for Quantum Devices
McCormick Dimension - September 1, 1993
McCormick's new Center for Quantum Devices opened June 7 with Nobel Laureates Leo Esaki, president of Japsn's University of Tsukuba and Klaus von Klitzing of Germany's Max Planck Institute joining center director Manijeh Razeghi in cutting the ceremonial red ribbon. ... [read more]
 
330.  
Quantum Leap for Research
Quantum Leap for Research
Northwestern Perspective - September 1, 1993
Northwestern's new center for Quantum Devices opened June 7th. Established by Manijeh Razeghi, the center is believed to be the most advanced of its kind in the U.S. It has already recieved federal grants totaling $2.2 million. ... [read more]
 
331.  
Researcher sheds light on opto-electronics
Researcher sheds light on opto-electronics
Chicago Tribune - November 9, 1992
In Evanston, Northwestern University scientist have for the first time built tiny lasers made from exotic materials onto a base of silicon, a difficult technical feat that could advance the marriage of optics and electronics. Razeghi said that the technology she uses to build the tiny laser, a type of chemical vapor deposition is widely used in industry. By teaching students how to use this tool to make lasers of silicon, she said, she is helping industry by providing a skilled work force. ... [read more]
 
332.  
Better Laser on a Chip
Better Laser on a Chip
Inside R&D - October 7, 1992
After years of trying in a number of labs, a way has been found to put indium phosphide on silicon. Manijeh Razeghi, a leading opto-electronics researcher, accomplished this and went on to build the most precise and long-lasting laser yet constructed on a silicon base, a key step towards combining electronics and photonics on a single computer chip. ... [read more]
 
333.  
Center for Quantum Devices Ready for Industry
Center for Quantum Devices Ready for Industry
Partner's Update - September 1, 1992
Manijeh Razeghi, Walter P. Murphy Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, has the new Center for Quantum Devices in Full operation in record time. After only six months of operation, the center has engaged in research on semiconductor lasers and materials for infrared, ultraviolet, and visible light detectors. ... [read more]
 
334.  
NU Engineering: Kellogg of the 1990s?
NU Engineering: Kellogg of the 1990s?
Crain's - April 30, 1992
In a ground-floor laboratory on Northwestern University's Evanston campus, Manijeh Razeghi, a world-renowned electrical engineering researcher, is building semiconductors atom by atom. Once a sleepy little school, NU's engineering programs are not engages in a $500 million head-to-toe rebuilding. The objective: To gain the kind of national pre-eminence attained by other NU schools, such as the Kellog Graduate School. ... [read more]
 
335.  
Vector agrees to cover cost of lab explosion cleanup
Vector agrees to cover cost of lab explosion cleanup
The Daily Northwestern - April 27, 1992
The $50,000 fume scrubber that Vector Technical Group insisted Prof. Manijeh Razeghi test received and un-ceremonial funeral Friday. The explosion Thursday evening caused the flooding of Razeghi's lab in the Technological Institute with water and non-toxic potassium permanganate. ... [read more]
 
336.  
Zap!
Zap!
The Daily Northwestern - April 6, 1992
The first semiconductor laser ever built at Northwestern was christened Friday morning as 25 researchers toasted electrical engineering Prof. Manijeh Razeghi for the "astounding" accomplishment. This development comes just seven months after heavily recruited Razeghi came to NU from Europe ... [read more]
 
337.  
Fishing for Faculty
Fishing for Faculty
The Daily Northwestern - February 26, 1992
Major universities net senior-level faculty the same way fishermen hook prize catfish. They keep their eyes out for the competition, put the most tempting bait of their hooks and prepare to sit and wait as long as they have to. Perhaps NU's biggest catch for the 1991-92 school year was electrical engineering and computer science Prof. Manijeh Razeghi, one of the world's leading researchers in optoelectronics. ... [read more]
 
338.  
Prestigious new proffesor to boost laser research
Prestigious new proffesor to boost laser research
The Daily Northwestern - October 15, 1991
A world-renowned researcher recently lured to the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science is vowing to make Northwestern a force in her field. Electrical engineering and computer science Prof. Manijeh Razeghi said NU has lagged behind other research institutions in optoelectronics or "magic eyes," the use of laser beams to exchange information at high speeds. ... [read more]
 
339.  
Optoelectronics Expert Joins the McCormic Faculty
Optoelectronics Expert Joins the McCormic Faculty
Northwestern Observer - September 23, 1991
Manijeh Razeghi, one of the leading researchers in the field of optoelectronics has been named to direct Northwestern's new Center of Exploratory Quantum Photonics and Electrical Engineering. Razeghi was recruited from her position as head of the exploratory Materials Laboratory of Thompson CFS in Orsay, France, by Jerome B. Cohen, Dean of the Robert R. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science. ... [read more]
 
340.  
Leading Researcher Directs Quantum Device Center
Leading Researcher Directs Quantum Device Center
McCormic Dimension - September 1, 1991
Manijeh Razeghi, one of the world's most respected researchers in the field of semiconductor devices, especially fiber optic telecommunications systems, has joined the faculty at the McCormic School as the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Razeghi will head the newly established Center for Quantum Devices, which she predicts will become "a center of gravity for the world of optoelectronic devices." ... [read more]
 
341.  
Six million dollar coup brings optics researcher to Tech
Six million dollar coup brings optics researcher to Tech
The Daily Northwestern - January 1, 1991
At a projected cost of about $6 million, Northwestern has hired a scientist described as the world leading researcher in solidstate. Manijeh Razeghi, a top researcher at Thomson Laboratories in France, will join the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department in September ... [read more]
 
342.  
MOVPE Update
MOVPE Update
The Fourth International MOVPE Conference, Hakone, Japan - May 1, 1988
The conference started with an almost traditional invited paper by one of the most prominent workers in MOVPE, Dr. Manijeh Razeghi. In a keynote address, Dr. Razeghi outlined the sheeer diversity and potential of MOVPE, with a catalogue of first of new materials, higherst mobilities, sharpest interfaces, and new devices. One delegate described Dr. Razeghi as "a Madonna of MOVPE producing material miracles" while another referred to this type of work as the essential driving force in the development of MOVPE as an explorative and diversifying technique. So on with the diversity! ... [read more]
 
343.  
 
[CTEC] ECE-223 Fall 2021
- November 30, 1999
... [read more]
 

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