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Quantum Technologies

The MIST Center ULTIMATE Symposium brings together academic, government, and industrial thought leaders on emerging hardware technologies that will pave the way for future electronics, networked systems, and distributed sensing platforms.

About this Session


We are on the cusp of a new quantum revolution that promises unprecedented schemes and technologies for computing, communication, and sensing, by exploiting unique quantum physics capabilities including superposition and entanglement.  To establish and utilize ‘quantum advantages’ in critical applications, immense opportunities and challenges emerge as we advance today’s quantum materials and devices toward

integration, scalable manufacturing, engineering complexity, as well as interfacing with mainstream semiconductor technologies.  This ULTIMATE symposium aims to explore the convergence of quantum science and engineering, to stimulate new ideas and advances in quantum engineering, and to engage and encourage young talents to venture to this frontier. 


Invited Speakers

John Burke

John Burke

Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) Program Manager
DARPA

John Burke joined DARPA as a program manager in the Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) in August 2017. He manages a portfolio of six programs predominantly focusing on quantum technology development. Previously, he worked at Air Force Research Lab (AFRL) Space Vehicles Directorate where he lead a research group developing optical atomic clocks for the Global Positioning System (GPS), work which won the Rotary National Award for Space Achievement. He received his BS in physics from Centre College and his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.[Read more]

John Kitching

John Kitching

Fellow
NIST

John Kitching is a Group Leader and Fellow at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and Lecturer at the University of Colorado, Boulder. His research focusses on the development of compact devices and instruments that combine atomic spectroscopy, silicon micromachining and photonics. He and his group pioneered the development of chip-scale atomic clocks and magnetometers, and have been involved in their application to problems in biomagnetism and nuclear magnetic resonance. [Read more]

Hanhee Paik

Hanhee Paik

Research Staff Member, Experimental Quantum Computing
IBM

Hanhee Paik pioneered the new design of a superconducting qubit that helped the industry to push the boundary of superconducting qubit performance. Her research on the quantum processor design has greatly impacted the quantum computing community. Today’s IBM Q commercial 20 qubit systems’ coherence times benefit from Dr. Paik’s work, and average an industry-best 100 microseconds. She is currently working on developing the next generation quantum computing processors. She played a pivotal role developing the 16-qubit IBM Q Experience device. [Read more]

Zheshen Zhang

Zheshen Zhang

Assistant Professor, Materials Science and Engineering
University of Arizona

Zheshen Zhang is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the James C. Wyant College of Optical Sciences at the University of Arizona. Dr. Zhang received the PhD degree from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Prior to joining UA in Fall 2017, Dr. Zhang was a Postdoctoral Associate and then a Research Scientist at MIT. Dr. Zhang’s research encompasses a broad swath of the experimental and theoretical aspects of quantum networks, quantum communications, quantum sensing, and quantum computing. Dr. Zhang is an Editorial Board Member of Communications Physics. [Read more]

Chunhui (Rita) Du

Chunhui (Rita) Du

Professor, Physics
University of California San Diego

Prof. Du is a condensed matter experimentalist with expertise in nanoscale quantum sensing. Her work focuses on single spin magnetometry with nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond, hybrid quantum devices based on optically active single spin qubit, spin transport and dynamics in nanostructured and quantum materials, and scanning probe based magnetic imaging. [Read more]

Jiwei Lu

Jiwei Lu

Program Officer
Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Jiwei Lu currently serves as the Program Officer for Condensed Matter Physics program, Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Prior to joining AFOSR, Dr. Lu spent 12 years as a faculty member in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Virginia. His research interests include strongly correlated oxides, magnetic materials and nanostructures, and multiferroic composites. In particular, he made contributions to the understanding of metal-insulator transition in vanadium dioxide and niobium dioxide. [Read more]

Agenda – July 14

StartTopic
12 p.m.Welcome and Logistics
12:05 p.m.ULTIMATE Symposium Objective
12:15 p.m.Invited Speaker: John Burke
12:45 p.m.Invited Speaker: Chunhui Du
1:15 p.m.Invited Speaker: Hanhee Paik
1:45 p.m.Invited Speaker: John Kitching
2:15 p.m.Invited Speaker: Jiwei Lu
2:45 p.m.Invited Speaker: Zheshen Zhang
3:15 p.m.Panel Discussion
3:45 p.m.Adjourn

Session Chairs

Avik Ghosh
Professor, University of Virginia
Philip Feng
Professor, University of Florida
Nikhil Shukla
Asst. Professor, University of Virginia
Jing Guo
Professor, University of Florida

MIST ULTIMATE Symposium Sessions

Coming 2022

Neuromorphic Computing at the Edge

The MIST Center ULTIMATE Symposium brings together academic, government, and industrial thought leaders on emerging hardware technologies that will pave the way for future electronics, networked systems, and distributed sensing platforms. 

August 2021

Bioelectronics for Pain and Addiction

Bioelectronics technologies can play a vital role in both in vitro and in vivo solutions that better recapitulate human pathophysiology of chronic and development of nonadditive therapeutics for treatment of pain.

This symposium will feature talks from experts in academic and industry that are at the forefront of this highly interdisciplinary area.

July 14, 2021

Quantum Computing/Sensing

This ULTIMATE symposium aims to explore the convergence of quantum science and engineering, to stimulate new ideas and advances in quantum engineering, and to engage and encourage young talents to venture to this frontier. 

Registration

To register for this event, please provide your information below. The meeting details will be provided to the email entered by July 7. Registration is free but required.

    The MIST Center is an NSF I/UCRC program. Any opinions or findings expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF.