Hernandez-Mejia, who has worked at ECE’s National Electric Energy Testing, Research, & Applications Center (NEETRAC) since 2017, brings extensive experience to the member-driven electric utility research center.
The ECE professor, who specializes in semiconductor memory devices and circuits, was selected for his exceptional record of scholarship and service to the Institute.
The undergraduate research group presented experiments showing how encrypted sounds can help swarms of unmanned autonomous vehicles securely communicate underwater.
The ECE professor received the Glass Brain Award for his work in neuroimaging to help further understand the organization and function of the human brain.
The team, led by ECE professor Shimeng Yu, analyzed different combinations of settings for emerging non-volatile memory (eNVM) technologies in hopes of improving AI hardware efficiency and power.
Al Jamal’s research on origami-inspired phased array antennas represents a quantum leap in antenna reconfigurability at mm-wave frequencies and a paradigm shift in massive MIMO applications and beyond-5G communication.