Sorab K Ghandhi | |
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Born | January 1, 1928 Allahabad, India |
Residence | Escondido, CA |
Nationality | United States of America |
Alma mater | University of Illinois |
Occupation | Professor Emeritus at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute |
Spouse | Cecilia M. Ghandhi |
Children | Khushro, Rustom, Behram |
Sorab (Soli) K. Ghandhi - Professor Emeritus at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), is known for his pioneering work in electrical engineering education, and in the advancement of Organometallic Vapor Phase Epitaxy (OMVPE) for compound semiconductors.
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Ghandhi was schooled at St. Joseph's College, Nainital , India, received his B.Sc. in electrical and mechanical engineering from Benares Hindu University in 1947, and his MS and Ph.D. in electronics from the University of Illinois in 1948 and 1951 respectively.
While a member of the Advanced Circuits Group, General Electric Company, from 1951–1960, he co-authored the first books in the world on transistor circuits[1] and transistor circuit engineering[2] He was a manager of the Components Group at the Philco Corporation from 1960-1963. During this time, as Chairman of the IRE Standards on Graphical symbols,Task Group 28.4.8, he was instrumental in obtaining international adoption of the US-derived graphical symbol for Transistors and other Semiconductor devices. (http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/index.php/First-Hand:Saving_the_Transistor_Symbol).He joined Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)in 1963 as a Professor of Electrophysics, and was Chairman from 1967-1974. He retired from RPI in 1992.
At RPI, he introduced microelectronics into the graduate studies curriculum and wrote a book on this subject.[3] Subsequently, this was followed by a book on semiconductor power devices,[4] in which he presented a comprehensive theory for second breakdown. Following the work of Manasevit in 1968,[5] he started the first university program on the OMVPE of compound semiconductors in 1970, and conducted research with his students in this area until retirement. This work included the growth and characterization of GaAs,[6] InAs, GaInAs, InP, CdTe, HgCdTe and ZnSe materials and devices, which resulted in over 180 papers. Many of these were "firsts" in the field: the growth of GaInAs over the full range of compositions,[7] the use of homostructures for evaluating recombination in surface-free GaAs,[8] the use of halogen etching in GaAs,[9] the OMVPE growth of large area films of HgCdTe with uniform composition[10] and the p-type doping of this HgCdTe.[11] He also wrote two books on VLSI fabrication principles which included silicon and GaAs materials technology.[12][13]
Member, Administrative Committee, IEE Transactions on Circuit Theory (1963-1966)
Guest Editor, Special Issue of the IEEE on Materials and Processes in Microelectronics (1966–1967)
Associate Editor, Solid-State Electronics (1974–1988)
Secretary, International Solid State Circuits Conference (1959)
Program Chairman, International Solid State Circuits Conference (1960)
Co-Chairman, Workshop on HgCdTe and other Low Gap Materials (1992)
Member, Editorial Board, IEEE Press (1983-1987).
Scholar, J.N. Tata Foundation (1947-1951)
Fellow, IEEE (1965)
Rensselaer Distinguished Teaching Award (1975)
Rensselaer Distinguished Professor Award (1987)
Education Award, Electron Device Society, IEEE (2010) http://eds.ieee.org/education-award.html