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American physicist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Erik Aspnes (born 1 May 1939 in Madison, Wisconsin) is an American physicist and a member of the National Academy of Sciences (1998). Aspnes developed fundamental theories of the linear and nonlinear optical properties of materials and thin films, and the technology of spectroscopic ellipsometry (SE). SE is a metrology that is used in the manufacture of integrated circuits.
David E. Aspnes | |
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Born | Madison, WI, United States | 1 May 1939
Alma mater | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign University of Wisconsin–Madison |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Condensed matter physics; surface physics; optics: expt. and theor. |
Institutions | North Carolina State University |
Aspnes grew up on a dairy farm in the Madison area, attending a one-room country school. Aspnes earned a Bachelors of Science in 1960 and a Masters of Science in 1961, in electrical engineering at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. He continued his education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he received a Ph.D. degree[1] in physics with a mathematics minor in 1965. Aspnes spent a postdoctoral year at UIUC, where he wrote several papers on the effect of electric fields on the optical properties of materials, and a second year at Brown University, where he began experimental work in the same field. In 1967 he joined the research area of Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, as a member of the technical staff.
At Bell Labs Aspnes pursued his interest in the optical properties of materials and thin films, and their use not only to characterize the type of material but also its nanostructure. When the operating companies were divested from AT&T in 1984, Aspnes moved to Bellcore, the Bell Laboratories of the operating companies, where he continued research as head of the interface physics and later interface physics and optical sciences department.
In 1992 Aspnes joined the department of physics of North Carolina State University, where he is a distinguished university professor of physics. He is active in teaching, research, and administration both at NCSU and with external organizations. He is chair of Class III of the National Academy of Sciences, has published approximately 500 papers, and holds 23 patents.
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