Richard A. Kiehl
Richard Arthur Kiehl
received the Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in electrical
engineering from Purdue
University in 1970 and
the Ph. D. degree from Purdue in 1974. His doctoral dissertation was on the
electron dynamics of transferred-electron microwave devices.
He joined Sandia National
Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico, as a Member of Technical Staff
in 1974. While at Sandia, he worked on semiconductor devices primarily for
radar applications. He initiated research on novel optically-controlled
microwave devices based on the effect of light on the carrier dynamics in
avalanche devices and was first to demonstrate modulation, phase-locking, and
switching of active microwave semiconductor devices by optical techniques.
These studies, which demonstrated high-speed control of microwave signals at
isolation levels beyond those of electronic techniques, stimulated research on
other optically controlled microwave devices for a range of applications.
In 1980, he joined
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray
Hill, New Jersey, as
a Member of Technical Staff and began research on compound semiconductor
devices for high-speed communications applications. He was a leading
contributor to Bell Labs R&D in heterostructure electronics. He led the phase of the Bell Labs project on
heterostructure field-effect transistors that first demonstrated a functional
integrated circuit in this technology.
He initiated research on heterostructure-based CMOS circuitry and was
co-inventor of concepts for resonant-tunneling transistors. His pioneering
studies in these areas had a major impact on research on compound semiconductor
devices at many laboratories.
In 1985, he joined IBM as
a Research Staff Member at the T. J. Watson Research Center,
Yorktown Heights, New York. At IBM he focused his work on
heterostructure-based CMOS circuitry in III-V and Si/SiGe
materials for high-speed computer applications. He carried out a wide range of
studies to examine the potential of heterostructure-based complementary FET
circuits, including bandgap engineering for p-channel
devices, vertical integration of complementary devices, and fabrication methods
for CMOS circuitry in compound semiconductor materials. This work, which
resulted in complementary AlGaAs/GaAs circuits with
record speeds at low supply voltages, had an important impact on industrial
R&D activities in the United States
and Japan.
In 1993, he joined
Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd., Atsugi,
Japan, as
Assistant Director of the Quantum Electron Devices Laboratory. He directed
research aimed at exploiting physical phenomena in ultrasmall structures for nanoelectronic circuitry. He proposed logic circuitry based
on electrical phase states in nanoscale devices and experimentally demonstrated
a novel approach for creating single-electron tunneling circuits based on
strain-directed metallic nanoparticle formation in a semiconductor. During his
three years in Japan,
he also developed an expertise in Japanese industrial, academic, and national
research programs in nanoelectronics.
In 1996, he joined Stanford University as an Acting Professor of
Electrical Engineering. At Stanford he
explored various device, circuit and fabrication concepts for nanoscale
electronics. He collaborated in a joint
project with other electrical engineering faculty to theoretically and
experimentally investigate possibilities for extending silicon MOS technology
beyond conventional limits. He was also associated with Stanford's US-Japan Technology Management
Center.
Since 1999, he has been
at the University
of Minnesota, where he is
the Louis J. Schnell Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering. His research is interdisciplinary and draws
on his broad industrial experience in electronic materials, devices and
circuits. The goal of his research is to develop new device concepts, circuit
architectures, and fabrication techniques for nanoscale information processing
systems and other nanoelectronic circuitry. His
current research topics include metal-molecule-semiconductor junctions, nanotube and nanowire based transistors, information
processing in nanoscale cellular nonlinear networks, and directed self-assembly
of components by DNA nanotechnology.
He played a leadership
role within the University of Minnesota as principal investigator of a center for
interdisciplinary research and education in nanoscience
(MONALISA, 2001) and as principal author of a white paper defining the scope of
a proposed nanotechnology center at the University of Minnesota
(OMNI, 2002). He is theme leader for the
research activities on “Nanoscale Architectures and Information Processing
Paradigms” within the SRC/MARCO research center on Functionally Engineered Nano
Architectonics (FENA). He is also the principle investigator of a DoD Multi-university Research Initiative (MURI) on
“Biologically Assembled Quantum Electronic Arrays”.
Dr. Kiehl has played an
active role in support of the international professional and research
communities. He served as Chairman, Albuquerque Section, Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers, and has served on the technical program committee
for various conferences including the IEEE International Electron Devices
Meeting, the Device Research Conference, the Workshop on Compound Semiconductor
Microwave Materials and Devices, and the Optical Society Topical Meeting on Picosecond Electronics and Optoelectronics. He has served
as session chairman at the Electrochemical Society Meeting, the International
Conference on Solid State Devices and Materials (Japan),
and the JRDC International Symposium on Nanostructures & Quantum Effects (Japan). He
organized the DARPA Workshop on Optoelectronic Microwave Devices, the Advanced
Heterostructure Transistors Conference, and the Workshop on III-V Device
Instabilities. Most recently, he served
on the program committee for the Silicon Nanoelectronics
Workshop (Satellite Workshop of 2004 VLSI Symposia), co-chaired the Joint
MARCO-NCN Workshop on Nano-Scale Reversible Computing (2005), and organized the
MARCO/FENA Workshop on Computation
in Nanoscale Dynamical Systems (2006).
He was invited to
contribute a review article on modulation-doped heterostructures for the book
"Low Temperature Electronics" (IEEE Press) and five of his technical
papers were selected for reprint in "Modulation-Doped Field-Effect
Transistors" (IEEE Press). He is co-editor of the book "High-Speed
Heterostructure Devices” (Academic Press Semiconductors and Semimetals
Treatise) and served as Associate Editor for the journal IEEE Electron Device Letters.
Professor Kiehl is a member of the American Physical Society
and the American Chemical Society. He is
a Fellow of The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.