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Prof. Thomas Yang

Information

Prof. Thomas C.-K. Yang is a Vice President of the National Taipei University of Technology. He also serves as a Distinguished Professor in the department of chemical engineering and biotechnology. His research interests include semiconductor fabrication, flexible electronics, nanotechnology, ceramic/polymer packaging, and the synthesis of frontier functional materials, with more than 150 research articles published in high-level international SCI journals. Professor Yang received his post-graduate training at the University of Missouri (USA) from 1989 to 1995. His MS thesis was engaged in the simulation and design of a semiconductor CVD reactor for the AT&T Corporation. In continuation of the chip fabrication studies, his Ph. D. dissertation emphasized ceramic packaging technology for the multichip modules as a project supported by the IBM cooperation. He joined Taipei Tech in 1996, and his research activities currently include barrier films for OLED devices, fabrication of dye-sensitized solar cells, semiconductor photocatalysts for clean energy, in-situ characterization for catalysis, and nanotechnology. He also conducted several industry-academic cooperation research projects, including the OLED barrier layer projects, bioceramic dental implant systems, and green energy in SOFC and solar cells.

Research Keywords & Expertise

Flexible Materials for...
Development and Applic...
Semiconductor Process ...
Bio-Medical Materials&...
Techniques for Nanomat...

Short Biography

Prof. Thomas C.-K. Yang is a Vice President of the National Taipei University of Technology. He also serves as a Distinguished Professor in the department of chemical engineering and biotechnology. His research interests include semiconductor fabrication, flexible electronics, nanotechnology, ceramic/polymer packaging, and the synthesis of frontier functional materials, with more than 150 research articles published in high-level international SCI journals. Professor Yang received his post-graduate training at the University of Missouri (USA) from 1989 to 1995. His MS thesis was engaged in the simulation and design of a semiconductor CVD reactor for the AT&T Corporation. In continuation of the chip fabrication studies, his Ph. D. dissertation emphasized ceramic packaging technology for the multichip modules as a project supported by the IBM cooperation. He joined Taipei Tech in 1996, and his research activities currently include barrier films for OLED devices, fabrication of dye-sensitized solar cells, semiconductor photocatalysts for clean energy, in-situ characterization for catalysis, and nanotechnology. He also conducted several industry-academic cooperation research projects, including the OLED barrier layer projects, bioceramic dental implant systems, and green energy in SOFC and solar cells.