Dr Serge Luryi received his Ph.D. degree in Physics from the University of Toronto in 1978. Between 1980 and 1994 he was a Member of the Technical Staff at Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ. During this period he had served as a Group Supervisor in Advanced VLSI Development Laboratory and several semiconductor device research departments, dealing with VLSI, Quantum Phenomena and Optoelectronics.
In 1994 Dr Luryi joined the faculty of the State University of New York at Stony Brook where he is a Distinguished Professor and Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Since 1998 Dr Luryi has been also the Director of the NY State Center for Advanced Technology in Sensor Systems.
Dr Luryi has published over 200 papers and has been awarded over 40 US patents in the areas of high-speed electronic and photonic devices, material science, sensor systems and electronic packaging.
In 1989 Dr. Luryi was elected Fellow of the IEEE for contributions in the field of heterojunction devices and in 1993 he was elected Fellow of the American Physical Society for theory of electron transport in low-dimensional systems and invention of novel electron devices. In 1990 Bell Laboratories recognized him with the Distinguished Member of Technical Staff award. In 2003 the SUNY Board of Trustees conferred on him the rank of Distinguished Professor.
During 1986-1990 Dr Luryi served on the Editorial Board of the IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, first as an Associate Editor and then the Editor of these Transactions.
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In 1995 Dr Luryi organized and served as the Director of an advanced
research workshop (NATO ARW, Ile de Bendor, France) on Future
Trends in Microelectronics: Reflections on the Road to Nanotechnology
It had the wollowing sequel meetings (all organized and chaired by Dr Luryi):
FTM-2 (June 1998, Ile des Embiez, France)
Future
Trends in Microelectronics: Off the Beaten Path
FTM-3 (June 2001, Ile de Bendor, France)
Future
Trends in Microelectronics: the Nano Millennium
FTM-4 (June 2003, Corsica, France)
Future
Trends in Microelectronics: The Nano, the Giga, the Ultra, and the Bio
FTM-5 (June 2006, Crete, Greece)
Future Trends in Microelectronics: Up the
Nano Creek
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New Year, 2007
