American engineering professor (born 1964)
For other persons with basically the same name, see
Yuri Vlasov .
Yurii Vlasov (born 1964) is a John Bardeen Endowed Chair in Electrical and Computer Engineering and Physics[ 1] at the University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign (UIUC).
Vlasov earned his M.S. University of St.-Petersburg, Russia in 1988 and Ph.D. from the Ioffe Institute of Physics and Technology, St.-Petersburg, Russia in 1995.[ 2]
Prior to joining UIUC in 2016, Vlasov held various positions at the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center . In 2001-2015 he led company-wide efforts in integrated silicon nanophotonics and more recently in neuromorphic computing architectures.[citation needed ]
Vlasov is recognized both as a scholar in the area of extreme optical confinement at the nanoscale – nanophotonics ,[ 3] as well as an industrial engineer who has led the transition of this basic scientific knowledge (TRL level 1–2) into a real-world manufacturable (TRL level 8–9) silicon nanophotonics technology.[ 4]
The CMOS9WG[ 5]
technology developed under the leadership of Vlasov at IBM [ 6] and lately deployed at GlobalFoundries [ 7] is enabling high-performance optical connectivity [ 8] in supercomputers , data centers , metro , and long-haul communications , while significantly reducing cost and maximizing energy efficiency.[citation needed ]
Recognition
Vlasov has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2021, for "contributions to development and commercialization of silicon photonics for optical data communications".[ 9] He has also been elected a Fellow of Optical Society of America in 2007,[ 10] a Fellow of American Physical Society in 2007,[ 11] and a Fellow of Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers in 2015[ 12] for his contributions to nanophotonics including photonic crystals and silicon photonics .
References
^ "John Bardeen Endowed Chair sponsored by the Sony Corporation" . Grainger College of Engineering. Retrieved 1 September 2021 .
^ Yurii A. Vlasov , Ph.D., Professor, John Bardeen Endowed Chair , retrieved 30 June, 2024
^ "CLEO 2012 Plenary Session" . OSA. 26 July 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2020 .
^ "2015 SPIE Plenary presentation: Silicon Integrated Nanophotonics" . SPIE. Retrieved 1 May 2020 .
^ Assefa, Solomon; Shank, Steven; Green, William; Khater, Marwan; Kiewra, Edward; Reinholm, Carol; Kamlapurkar, Swetha; Rylyakov, Alexander; Schow, Clint; Horst, Folkert; Pan, Huapu; Topuria, Teya; Rice, Philip; Gill, Douglas M.; Rosenberg, Jessie; Barwicz, Tymon; Yang, Min; Proesel, Jonathan; Hofrichter, Jens; Offrein, Bert; Gu, Xiaoxiong; Haensch, Wilfried; Ellis-Monaghan, John; Vlasov, Yurii (2012). "A 90nm CMOS integrated Nano-Photonics technology for 25Gbps WDM optical communications applications" . 2012 International Electron Devices Meeting . IEEE IEDM 2012. pp. 33.8.1–33.8.3. doi :10.1109/IEDM.2012.6479162 . ISBN 978-1-4673-4871-3 . S2CID 6995236 .
^ "Made in IBM Labs: IBM Lights Up Silicon Chips to Tackle Big Data" . IBM press release 10 Dec 2012. Archived from the original on December 19, 2012.
^ "Silicon Photonics Roadmap to Meet Explosive Demand for Datacenter Connectivity" . Globalfoundries press release Mar 14, 2018. 14 March 2018.
^ "Silicon photonics" . Globalfoundries . Retrieved 1 May 2020 .
^ "National Academy of Engineering Elects 106 Members and 23 International Members" . Retrieved 11 February 2021 .
^ "2007 OSA Fellows" . Optical Society of America. Retrieved 1 May 2020 .
^ "APS Fellow Archive" . American Physical Society. Retrieved 1 May 2020 .
^ "IEEE Fellows Directory" . IEEE.org. Retrieved 1 May 2020 .
External links