Eric Pop Romanian-born American engineer and academic
Eric Pop is a Romanian-born American engineer and academic at Stanford University , where he serves as Pease-Ye Professor in the School of Engineering .[ 1] Pop is a professor of electrical engineering , and, by courtesy, of applied physics and materials science and engineering at Stanford, and his research includes work on carbon nanotubes ,[ 2] phase-change memory ,[ 3] and nanotechnology .[ 4] In 2010, he received the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers .[ 5] [ 6] Pop is a fellow of both the American Physical Society and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers , is recognized as a Highly Cited Researcher ,[ 7] and has an entry in the 36th, 37th, and 38th editions of American Men and Women of Science .[ a]
Early life and education
Pop grew up in Romania , speaking both Romanian and Hungarian . He attended Emanuil Gojdu High School in Oradea , and competed in physics olympiads . After moving to the United States at the age of 17, he attended Santa Monica High School for 11th and 12th grades.[ 8]
In 1999, he completed three degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT): two Bachelor of Science degrees, one in physics , another in electrical engineering, and a Master of Engineering , also in electrical engineering.[ 1] At MIT, he was a member of the Romanian Student Association.[ 9] Pop continued his education by pursuing a doctorate at Stanford University . In 2004,[ 10] he defended his dissertation ,[ b] and in 2005 he received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering.[ 1] He continued as a postdoctoral researcher under Hongjie Dai in Stanford's chemistry department.[ 11]
Career
Immediately after his postdoctoral research, he joined Intel as a senior engineer,[ 12] where he worked from 2005 to 2007.[ 1] From 2007 to 2015, Pop was faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC).[ c] [ 1] He joined the faculty of Stanford's electrical engineering department in 2013.[ 13] Pop noted that the transition to a new institution was a slow process—he had to wait for his grants to be transferred over.[ 14] He has had a successful career at Stanford, where he is the inaugural Pease-Ye Professor, a position named for its endowers , Jun Ye and Caren Wang, and for Pop's relationship with R. Fabian Pease . He was appointed to the professorship in 2023.[ 15]
References
1 2 3 4 5 "Eric Pop" (Curriculum Vitae). March 2024. Retrieved April 5, 2024 – via Stanford University .
↑ Clarke, Peter (March 14, 2011). "Academics scale PCM with carbon nanotubes" . EE Times . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ "Altered states" . The Economist . August 30, 2012. Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ Fox, Douglas (April 12, 2011). "Small is big: a cellphone chip that allows monthly battery charge" . Christian Science Monitor . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ Weiss, Rick (November 5, 2010). "President Honors Outstanding Early-Career Scientists" (Press release). Office of Science and Technology Policy . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ Adderly, Shawn; Kubetz, Rick (November 8, 2010). "Pop receives Presidential Early Career Award" . Electrical & Computer Engineering . UIUC . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
1 2 "Eric Pop" . Stanford Profiles . Stanford University . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ Costea, Bogdan (January 13, 2011). "Eric Pop, de la Jules Verne la Barack Obama" . Ziarul Timpul (in Romanian). Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ "Past members of RSA" . MIT Romanian Student Association . Massachusetts Institute of Technology . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ Pop, Eric (August 5, 2004). "Self-Heating and Scaling of Silicon Nano-Transistors" (PDF) . Retrieved April 5, 2024 – via nanoHUB .
↑ "Publications" . Dai Laboratory . Stanford University . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ McNeely, Marie. "Dr. Eric Pop: Engineering Novel Solutions for Data Storage and Energy Management in Electronics" . People Behind the Science (Podcast). Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ "Report of the President: Academic Council Professoriate appointments" . Stanford University . April 19, 2013. Retrieved December 2, 2023 .
↑ Bernstein, Rachel (September 23, 2014). "Managing a lab move" . Careers. Science . doi :10.1126/science.caredit.a1400232 . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ "Eric Pop appointed the inaugural Pease-Ye Professor" . Electrical Engineering . Stanford University . February 13, 2023. Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
↑ "ERIC POP Inventions, Patents and Patent Applications" . Justia Patents Search . Justia . Retrieved April 5, 2024 .
International National Academics