Dr. Lin Qinghuang, the specially-invited consultant expert of the Alliance was elected as a member of the 2017 SPIE Society

2017/01/20
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In January 2017, Dr. Lin Qinghuang, the specially-invited consultant expert of the Materials and Components Alliance and the Researcher at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Institute, USA, was elected as the member of 2017 SPIE Society. On February 10, 2015, Dr. Lin Qinghuang was officially employed as the “Specially-invited Consultant Expert of the Integrated Circuit Materials and Components Alliance”. In 2016, he served as the Vice Chairman of the Advanced Microelectronics and Optoelectronic Materials Parallel Session of the 17th Asian Materials Conference hosted by the Alliance, and organized the training session of the first session of the "Integrated Circuit Chip Manufacturing Process and Integration Technology" and taught in person. The training session received enthusiastic response from the industry.

Founded in 1955, The International Society for Optical and Photonics Engineering (SPIE) is a non-profit organization dedicated to the exchange, collection, dissemination and application of knowledge in the fields of optics, photonics, optoelectronics, imaging, and image processing. Famous professional society of sex. Serving 264,000 members in 166 countries around the world. SPIE organizes and sponsors approximately 25 major technology forums, exhibitions, and educational programs each year in North America, Europe, Asia, and South Africa. The main tasks include providing information and educational products and services to members and the international engineering science community, providing a platform for communication in the field of optics and photonics and its interaction with other fields, and organizing conferences and educational projects for emerging technologies. The digital library published by SPIE and the annual academic conferences provide various forms of information reflecting the latest developments and developments in the corresponding professional fields. They have extremely high academic value and have become extremely scientific and technological personnel in optics and their applications. A source of information that values ​​and welcomes.
 
SPIE Fellow, a member of the International Society of Optical Engineering, is a member of the International Society of Optical Engineering for the recognition of major scientific achievements in the interdisciplinary field of optics, photonics and imaging technology, and for the optical field, especially for SPIE. . Since the founding of the International Society of Optical Engineering in 1955, more than 1,000 SPIE members have been elected as members. In 2017, the International Society of Optical Engineering added 71 new members, and Dr. Lin Qinghuang was honored for his outstanding contribution to the field of lithography materials and processes in integrated circuit manufacturing.
 
Dr. Lin Qinghuang has been engaged in semiconductor (integrated circuit, chip) research for nearly 20 years. He is an expert in the semiconductor chip industry. He has participated in or presided over the research and development of 0.25-μm to 10 nm CMOS and DRAM and other exploratory research projects, with research and development. Extensive experience in engineering, management and technology strategy decisions. Dr. Lin has 75 US patents granted, and about 70 US patents pending, and he is the winner of 23 IBM Outstanding Invention Achievement Awards. Dr. Lin has published more than 60 academic papers, 6 editorial and publishing monographs, and 9 academic conference proceedings. He is the Associate Editor of the Journal of Micro/Nanolithography, MEMS, and MOEMS and the guest editor of the Journal of Materials Research. In 2002, Dr. Lin won the IBM Technical Achievement Award for inventing, developing and implementing 248 nm double-layer photoresist technology. This technological breakthrough is one of IBM's major technical contributions to the world's semiconductor industry over the past 40 years, and won the US's highest technology award, the 2004 US National Medal of Technology. The technology invented by Dr. Lin is widely used to manufacture cutting-edge chips in high-end servers and popular mobile phones.