School of Engineering
Showing 1-20 of 94 Results
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Nancy Ammar
Ph.D. Student in Electrical Engineering, admitted Autumn 2021
EE 346 Grader, Electrical Engineering - Student ServicesBioNancy Y. Ammar received her B.Sc. degree (with honors) in electronics and communication engineering from Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt, in 2019. In her senior year, she worked as an undergraduate Research Assistant in the Microwaves and Antenna Research Lab at Ain Shams University. She worked as an IC design consultant at Siemens EDA (Mentor Graphics previously).
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Richard Bahr
Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering
BioAcademic experience:
Presently advising the Stanford SystemX Alliance, and the EE/CS AHA! Research center as an adjunct prof. Formerly the executive director of the SystemX Alliance, and a consulting professor at Stanford.
Commercial experience:
Presently an advisor, consultant and mentor to a number of startup companies primarily in the computing and wireless spaces. Formerly the SrVP responsible for Wi-Fi technology at Qualcomm, and before that the engineering executive responsible for the MIPS microprocessor and Cray supercomputer development at SGI.
Education: BSEE and MSEE from MIT.
For more extensive background, please consult my linked in profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rickbahr. -
Craig Barratt
Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering
BioActing director of System X and instructor for EE310 in Winter and Spring 2023-24.
I received MSEE and Ph.D. (EE) degrees at Stanford long ago, and a BS (math and physics) and BE (EE) from the University of Sydney, Australia (even longer ago).
After a career in the tech industry at several startups and large companies, I currently serve on a couple of public and private company boards, and I'm on the advisory board of Stanford's Center for Digital Health. I also contribute to some open source projects.
See my bio at https://www.linkedin.com/in/craig-h-barratt. -
Jian Chen
Adjunct Professor, Electrical Engineering
BioRetired executive with 30 years of experience in NOR, 2D NAND and 3D NAND flash memories, in the areas of device physics, process integration, reliability, test & product engineering, memory systems architecture, eco-systems and new business development. With a passion for innovation and practical solutions and teamwork, built multiple teams from ground up including at international sites.
Inventor of >150 US patents and some significant ideals that have been used in over 10 generations of NAND memory chip and systems, such as binary cache for MLC (USP# 5,930,167 ), fast MLC NAND writing method GPW (USP# 6,522,580 and 6,643,188 ), read method to correct cell to cell coupling effect (USP#5,867,429), NAND memory WL air-gap (USP# 7,045,849 ), and highly reliable systems EPWR (USP#8,214,700, 8,386,861 aka EPWR).
Published the paper that coined the term GIDL, and the first paper that identified the physics of the GIDL current as due to band-to-band tunneling.
Google scholar h-index 57. -
Jasmine M. Cox
Ph.D. Student in Electrical Engineering, admitted Autumn 2020
ENGR 240 Grader, Electrical Engineering - Student ServicesBioJasmine Cox is a PhD candidate in Electrical Engineering. She received her B.S. in Electrical Engineering with a minor in Applied Mathematics from Boise State University in 2020. During her undergraduate academic career, Jasmine was a Ronald E. McNair Scholar and a member of the Advanced Nanomaterials and Manufacturing Laboratory focusing on additive manufacturing of flexible hybrid electronics. Her current research as a member of Prof. Debbie G. Senesky’s group, EXtreme Environment Microsystems Lab (XLab), explores the synthesis, fabrication, and characterization of devices and materials in extreme environments that can be found in space.
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Beverly Davis
Administrative Associate, Electrical Engineering
Current Role at StanfordFaculty Administrative Assistant for Professors
Daniel Congreve, Eric Pop, Nick McKeown and the Shenoy Lab -
John DeSilva
Systems & Network Manager, Electrical Engineering
Current Role at StanfordSystems & Network Manager, David Packard Electrical Engineering Building