Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT :: Link :: Home
Google-RLE Search
  
People
Link: Back To Main
Home
About
News
People
Research
Media
Services
Contact

People > Vladimir Bulovic > Biographical Background

Vladimir Bulovic

Vladimir Bulovic
KDD Associate Professor of Communications and Technology

Biographical Background

Professor Vladimir Bulovic is a principal investigator in the Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Professor Bulovic was graduated from Princeton University with a B.S.E. (1991), M.A. (1995), and Ph.D. (1998) in Electrical Engineering.

Professor Bulovic joined the faculty of MIT in 2000 as an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His research interests include studies of physical properties of organic and organic/inorganic nanodot composite thin films and structures, and development of novel optoelectronic organic and hybrid nano-scale devices. In 2004, Professor Bulovic was named as one of the TR100, the list of top young innovators in technology named annually by Technology Review magazine. In the same year, he also was awarded the Presidential Early Career Award (PECASE), the nation's highest honor for scientists and engineers at the beginning of their research careers.

Prior to joining MIT, Professor Bulovic was a Senior Scientist and Project Head of Strategic Technology Development at Universal Display Corporation (UDC). At UDC he worked on the application of organic materials to LEDs for full color flat panel displays and thin film photovoltaics for solar cell and detector applications. His work resulted in development of OLED backlights, pixilated arrays of stacked OLEDs, and improved performance of phosphorescent OLEDs. Prior to joining UDC he worked in Princeton's POEM Center as a graduate researcher (1993-1998) and research associate (1998-1999). At Princeton, Professo Bulovic participated in a series of projects examining optical and electrical properties of vacuum deposited amorphous and crystalline molecular organic thin films and devices. His work resulted in development of OLED technologies such as transparent, inverted, and stacked OLEDs, demonstration of the first optically pumped organic semiconductor lasers, and understanding of photogeneration in organic photovoltaic devices, microcavity effects in luminescent devices, and the solid state solvation effects in polar organic media. From 1991-1993, Professor Bulovic worked at Columbia University's Microelectronics Sciences Laboratory, where for he examined image-potential states and resonances on metal surfaces utilizing non-linear two-photon photoemission spectroscopy.


  Site Map | Site Credits

   Research Laboratory of Electronics

Link: MIT