Edward H. Sargent FRSC is a Canadian scientist, who serves as University Professor of Electrical & Computer Engineering[1] and Vice-President of Research and Innovation, and Strategic Initiatives[2][3] at the University of Toronto. He also is the Canada Research Chair in Nanotechnology.[4] He will join the Departments of Chemistry and of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Northwestern University, and will be affiliated with the International Institute for Nanotechnology at Northwestern.[5]

Quick Facts Ted Sargent, Born ...
Ted Sargent
Born
Edward Hartley Sargent
Alma materUniversity of Toronto Ph.D. (1998)
Queen's University at Kingston B.Sc.Eng. (1995)
SpouseShana O. Kelley
AwardsKillam Prize for Engineering (2020)

NSERC Brockhouse Award (2016)

Steacie Prize (2012)
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of Toronto (1998-present)
ThesisThe lateral current injection laser: Theory, design, fabrication (1998)
Doctoral advisorJingming Xu
Doctoral studentsLeyla Soleymani
Websitelight.utoronto.ca
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Sargent has made contributions in the use of colloidal quantum dots and perovskite materials for optoelectronic devices, including photovoltaic cells,[6][7][8] photodetectors,[9][10] and light emitting materials.[11] Sargent has also published in the area of electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide.[12][13]

Sargent has been honored with multiple awards for his research, including a Killam Prize for Engineering in 2020,[14] the NSERC Brockhouse Award in Interdisciplinary Research and Engineering with Shana Kelley in 2016,[15][16] and the Steacie Prize in 2012.[17][18] He is a fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering,[19][20] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[21]

Education

Sargent spent several summers in the early 1990s working on quantum well lasers at Nortel.[22] He studied Engineering Physics at Queen's University at Kingston, earning his B.Sc.Eng. in 1995.[23] Sargent then conducted graduate studies in Electrical and Computer Engineering, in the area of Photonics, at the University of Toronto, with Prof. Jingming Xu. He graduated with his Ph.D. in 1998.[23]

Career

Sargent began his independent research career at the University of Toronto as an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in 1998.[24] He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2002, and full Professor in 2005. In 2015, Sargent was appointed as University Professor, the University of Toronto's most distinguished rank.[25]

Sargent has also held multiple administrative roles within the University of Toronto. From 2009 to 2012, he served as Associate Chair of Research, for the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.[25] He was the Vice-Dean, Research for the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering from 2012 to 2016.[25] Sargent served as the Vice-President, International for the University of Toronto from 2016 to 2020, helping to recruit new international graduate student researchers.[26][27] Since 2020, he has served as the Vice-President, Research and Innovation, and Strategic Initiatives.[2][3]

Sargent has held several visiting professorships. From 2004 to 2005, he was a Nanotechnology and Photonics Visiting Professor at the MIT Microphotonics Center.[21] In 2013 he was a Fulbright Visiting Professor at UCLA.[21] In fall of 2017, he was a Somorjai Visiting Miller Professor at UC Berkeley,[28] and in April 2018 he was a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the Rowland Institute at Harvard University.[29]

In 2005, he published for the general public about nanotechnology and its applications in everyday life, The Dance of Molecules: How Nanotechnology is Changing Our Lives.[30]

University spin-offs

Sargent has also co-founded several university spin-off companies. In 2006, he founded InVisage Technologies, which was acquired by Apple in 2017.[31] With Prof. Shana Kelley, Sargent co-founded Xagenic in 2010,[32] a molecular diagnostics company. Xagenic was partially acquired in 2018 by the General Atomics - Electromagnetic Systems Group (GA-EMS).[33] With Dr. Sjoerd Hoogland, Sargent also co-founded QD Solar in 2014, which aims to develop tandem solar cells using perovskites and quantum dots.[34][35]

Awards and memberships

Sargent has been honored with multiple awards and learned society memberships for his research, including:

Personal life

Sargent is married to fellow University of Toronto Professor Shana Kelley.[18][43] They met at a nanotechnology conference at UC Irvine, and have two children together.[44]

References

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