Professor Max Shulaker began as Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in 2016, where he leads the Novels (Novel Electronic Systems Group) at MIT. Previously to joining MIT, he was at Stanford University where he received his B.S., Masters, and PhD in Electrical Engineering. Prof. Shulaker’s research interests include the broad area of nanosystems. His research group focuses on understanding and optimizing multidisciplinary interactions across the entire computing stack – from low-level synthesis of nanomaterials, to fabrication processes and circuit design for emerging nanotechnologies, up to new architectures – to enable the next generation of high performance and energy-efficient computing systems. His research results include the demonstration of the first carbon nanotube computer(highlighted on the cover of Nature and presented as a Research Highlight to the US Congress by the US NSF), the first digital sub-systems built entirely using carbon nanotube transistors (awarded the ISSCC Jack Raper Award for Outstanding Technology Directions Paper), the first monolithically-integrated 3D integrated circuits combining arbitrary vertical stacking of logic and memory, the highest performance carbon nanotube transistors to-date, and the first highly-scaled carbon nanotube transistors fabricated in a VLSI-compatible manner.
People / Directory (General Staff Directory)
category
3
Max Shulaker
Max M. Shulaker
Assistant Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS)
MIT's Max Shulaker: Assistant Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS).
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Room 39-567B
Cambridge, MA 02139
Room 39-567B
Cambridge, MA 02139
Selected Publications
10.27.2021
Carbon Nanotubes for Radiation-Tolerant Electronics
07.05.2018
DISC-FETs: Dual Independent Stacked Channel Field-Effect Transistors
Related News Links
10.29.2021
Associate Professor of EECS Max Shulaker Named 2021 Moore Inventor Fellow
06.01.2020
Carbon nanotube transistors make the leap from lab to factory floor
09.05.2019
MIT engineers build advanced microprocessor out of carbon nanotubes