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Spring 2002 Colloquium Series
Dr.
John Rogers![John Rogers [photo]](../images/rogers.jpg)
Electronic Paperlike Displays
Wednesday Februrary 27, 2002
Building 8 Auditorium - 3:30 PM
(Refreshments at 3:00 PM)
Dr. John Rogers, will talk about Electronic Paperlike
Displays. Low cost electronic displays that have the look and feel of
conventional printed-paper will dramatically change the way that we
use and interact with laptop computers, personal digital assistants
and cellular telephones. They will also fundamentally alter our notions
of newspapers, magazines, greeting cards, and even cereal boxes, bumper
stickers and wallpaper. These ‘electronic paper’ displays are radically
different than traditional systems, which rely on cathode ray vacuum
tubes or liquid crystals with silicon-based circuitry on plates of glass.
Electronic paper is a thin, high contrast, reflective display that can
be flexed, bent, rolled-up and folded. Dr. John Rogers will present
some of the recent work in this area, with a focus on the printing techniques
and materials for active matrix backplane circuits for these types of
displays.
Dr. John Rogers is the Director of Condensed Matter Physics Research
at Bell Laboratories. His current interests include new methods for
micro- and nano- fabrication, plastic electronics, soft materials for
photonics, high-frequency acoustics and active optical-fiber devices.
Dr. Rogers obtained BA and BS degrees in chemistry and physics from
the University of Texas, Austin, in 1989. His graduate work was done
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under a National Science
Foundation Fellowship. He received SM degrees in physics and chemistry
in 1992 and a PhD degree in physical chemistry in 1995, all from MIT.
The picosecond laser ultrasonic methods that Rogers developed during
his PhD research were commercialized through a successful start-up company,
Active Impulse Systems, Inc. (AIS) that he co-founded in 1995. In 1998
Philips acquired this company, in whole. From 1995 to 1997, Rogers was
a Junior Fellow in the Harvard University Society of Fellows. During
this time he served as a Director for AIS and conducted research in
the laboratory of G.M. Whitesides. Dr. Rogers has published more than
85 papers and is an inventor on over 60 patents and patent applications,
more than 30 of which are either licensed or in active use. He was selected
as one of the nation’s top 100 young innovators for the 21st century
by MIT’s Technology Review magazine in 1999 and was awarded a similar
honor by the National Academy of Engineering in 2000. His work with
electronic paper received the American Chemical Society’s Team Innovation
Award, an R&D100 award, and R&D Magazine’s Editors Choice for the “Best
of the Best” new technology for 2001. He was also recently named the
2001 Robert B. Woodward Scholar by the Department of Chemistry and Chemical
Biology, Harvard University.
IS&T Colloquium Committee Host: Janet Ormes
jormes@library.gsfc.nasa.gov
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