Yu-Chong Tai, Ph.D

Professor of Electrical Engineering

 

136-93 Caltech
Moore Laboratory
Pasadena, CA 91125
U.S.A.

email: yctai@mems.caltech.edu
phone: (626) 395-8317
fax: (626) 584-9104

 
 

Education

Ph.D., 1989, EECS Department, University of California at Berkeley, CA
M.S., 1986, EECS Department, University of California at Berkeley, CA
B.S., 1981, EE Department, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan

Academic Experience

Caltech 2005-present, Executive Office of EE, Caltech
2005-present, Full Professor of EE, ME and BE, Caltech
2002-present, Professor of Bioengineering and Electrical Engineering
2002-present, Option Representative, Electrical Engineering
2000-present, Professor of Electrical Engineering
1995-1999, Associate Professor of EE.
1989-1994, Assistant Professor of EE.
Research: MEMS – sensors, actuators, smart skins, lab-on-a-chip
U.C. Berkeley 1988-1989, Graduate Instructor (GI) 1983-1988, Graduate Research Assistant (GRA)
Research: Polysilicon Mechanisms and Micromotors
NTU (Taiwan) 1977-1981, Undergrad, EE Department

Awards

Best Poster Paper (PhD students: PJ Chen, et al.), MicroTAS Confernece (2006)
Best Student Paper (PhD student: Jason Shih), IEEE Sensors Conference (2006)
Fellow, IEEE (2006)
ASCIT Teaching Award, Caltech (2005)
Fellow, Institute of Physics (2004)
Achievement Award, Association of Laboratory Automation (ALA) (2002)
General co-Chair, IEEE MEMS Meeting (2002)
Technical Program co-Chair, IEEE MEMS Conference (2001)
Finalist Award in Aerospace, 11th Discover Award (2000).
Achievement Award, CESASC (1999)
Best Paper Award, 1998 Int. Relay Conference, NARM/EIA (1998)
Packard Fellowship, The David and Lucile Packard Foundation (1991-1997)
Presidential Young Investigator (PYI) Award, NSF (1991-1996)
Senior Member, IEEE and ASME (1995-present)
Member, Phi Tau Phi (1990-present)
David J. Sakrison Memorial (Best Thesis) Prize, EECS, UC Berkeley (1989)
Best Student Paper, 1988 IEEE Int. Electron Device Meeting (IEDM’88) (1988)
IBM Fellowship (1988)
Ross N. Tucker, AIME Electronics Material Award (1987)

Membership/Societies

IEEE Electron Device Society (EDS)
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Institute of Physics (IOP)
Phi Tau Phi

Academic Activities

2005 Program Committee, IEEE MOEM Conference
2005 Technical Program Committee, IEEE Sensors Conference
2004 Program Committee, IEEE MOEM Conference
2004 Technical Program Committee, IEEE Sensors Conference
2003-present Member, BMES ERC Center at USC, NSF
2003-present Steering Committee, National Nanotechnology Center, Taiwan
2003-present Subject Editor, IEEE/ASME Journal of MEMS
2003 Chair of the Steering Committee, 2003 IEEE MEMS Conference
2003 Program Committee, IEEE MOEM Conference
2002-present Member, URETI CMISE Center at UCLA, NASA
2002-present Member, CENS ERC Center at UCLA, NSF
2002-2004 Section Editor, Sensors and Actuators
2002 Program Committee, IEEE MOEM conference
2002 General Chairman, IEEE MEMS Conference
2001-present Advanced R&D Steering Committee, ITRI, Taiwan
2001 Designated Chairman, IEEE MEMS Conference
2001 Technical Program Committee, IEEE MEMS Conference
2000 Technical Program committee, IEEE ICRA Conference
2000 Technical Program Committee, IEEE MEMS Conference
1999 Technical Program Committee, IEEE MEMS Conference
1999 Program/Steering Committee, MOEM’99
1998-present Member, CNSE ERC Center at Caltech, NSF
1998 Technical Program Committee, IEEE MEMS Conference
1998 Scholarship Committee, Phi Tau Phi
1997 Technical program Committee, IEEE MEMS Meeting
1997-present MEMS Administration Committee, IEEE ED Society
1997 Technical Committee, 1997 IEEE LEOS Meeting
1997 Technical Program Committee, Int. Optical MEMS Meeting
1996-present Associate Editor, J. of Micromechanics and Microengineering
1995 Technical Committee, IEDM’95
1994 Technical Committee, IEDM’94
1993 Technical Committee, IEDM’93
1990-1996 1990-1996 Scholarship Committee, CESASC

National Committees

2004 Invited Expert, EPA, USA
1999-2003 DARPA Information Science and Technology (ISAT) Study Group

Research Activities and Interests

Yu-Chong Tai has over 12 years of experience doing micromachines and/or Micro-electro-mechanical-system (MEMS) research. His research interests include MEMS technology, microsensors, microactuators, microstructure, MEMS systems, and MEMS science. To name a few, successfully developed MEMS devices in his lab include pressure sensors, shear-stress sensors, hot-wire anemometers, magnetic actuators, microphones, microvalves, micromotors, and so on. System-level MEMS research projects then include integrated M3 (microelectronics + microsensors + microactuators) drag-reduction smart surface, flexible smart skin for the control unmanned aerial vehicles, and micro fluid delivery systems. He is also interested in MEMS sciences such as MEMS material (mechanical and thermal) properties, micro fluid mechanics, and micro/nano processing issues.

Dr. Tai built the Micromachining Laboratory at Caltech, which is an 8,000 sq. ft. facility completely designed for MEMS research. This facility has a clean-room lab (4,000 sq. ft), CAD lab, and a measurement/metrology lab. It is currently supporting more than 20 researchers (mainly graduates and postdocs) with various MEMS research projects (https://mems.caltech.edu). Examples include micro scanning mirrors, neural chips, micro electromagnetic relays, field-emission tips, etc. For the last few years, he has extensively worked on MEMS devices for active fluid sensing and control. Successfully developed MEMS devices include flexible sensor skins, rubber-balloon actuators, etc.  In addition, he also has research on integrated MEMS systems such as MEMS for delta-wing aerodynamic control, and MEMS-maneuvered unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).  Since seven years ago, he has initiated a major effort on microfluidics and labs-on-a-chip. He has built devices like micro channels, membrane filters, micro valves, pumps, and bioreactors for bio-medical applications. He has an extensive and collaborative research program with USC Medical School on retinal implants, including MEMS devices for eye applications. He also has a significant research effort on nanotechnology for artificial muscle applications.

Publications