Ronald D. Schrimpf

Ronald D. Schrimpf
Born Lake City, Minnesota, USA
Nationality U.S
Fields Semiconductor Device Physics, Radiation Effects of Semiconductor Devices, Soft error
Institutions Vanderbilt University, University of Arizona, Université Montpellier 2
Alma mater University of Minnesota
Doctoral advisor R. M. Warner
Known for Enhanced Low Dose Rate Sensitivity in Bipolar Junction Transistors
Notable awards

Fellow of the IEEE

Chancellor's Award for Research, Vanderbilt University, 2003

Ronald D Schrimpf is an American electrical engineer and scientist. He is the Orrin H. Ingram Chair in Engineering, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science at Vanderbilt University.[1] where his research activities focus on microelectronics and semiconductor devices. He is affiliated with the Radiation Effects and Reliability Group at Vanderbilt University where he works on the effects of radiation on semiconductor devices and integrated circuits. He also serves as the Director of the Institute for Space and Defense Electronics at Vanderbilt. He is best known for his work in the field of ionizing radiation response on Bipolar junction transistor (BJT) and Enhanced Low Dose Rate Sensitivity in BJT.

Early life and education

Ron Schrimpf was born on 18 August 1959 in Lake City, Minnesota. He graduated from Lincoln Secondary School, Wabasha county, Lake City in 1977 and went on to join the University of Minnesota as an undergraduate student in the Department of Electrical Engineering. He graduated from University of Minnesota with a PhD in 1986.

Career

University of Arizona

After graduating in 1986, he joined the University of Arizona in 1986 as an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering. He rose through the ranks and became a Professor when he left the university in 1996.

Vanderbilt University

In 1996, along with a few other professors, Ron Schrimpf moved to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. Along with Kenneth Galloway and Shera Kerns, they established the Radiation Effects and Reliability Group at Vanderbilt, which is now the largest of its type at any US University.[2]

He has served as the Principal Investigator for two Multi-Disciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) programs and is a co-PI of Vanderbilt’s Advanced Computing Center for Research and Education. Ron is the first Faculty Head of House for Memorial House in Vanderbilt’s residential college program for first-year students: The Martha Rivers Ingram Commons. He has more than 700 papers in peer reviewed journals and conferences and has 7 U.S patents.

Awards and honors

Ron Schrimpf is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. He received the Vanderbilt Chancellor’s Cup in 2010 for “the greatest contribution outside the classroom to undergraduate student-faculty relationships in the recent past” the Harvey Branscomb Distinguished Professor Award in 2008-09, the Outstanding Teaching Award from the Vanderbilt University School of Engineering in 2008, the Chancellor’s Award for Research in 2003, and the IEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Society Early Achievement Award in 1996. He has received seven outstanding paper awards.

Personal life

He is married to Kathy Schrimpf and has a son Matt Schrimpf and a daughter Natalie Schrimpf. He is a member of the Lutheran Church.

Selected publications

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.