| R. Stanley Williams
HP Senior Fellow, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories; Director,
Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory (IQSL)
|
R. Stanley Williams is an HP Senior Fellow at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories and Director of
the Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory (IQSL), which currently has over 80 scientists
and engineers working in areas of fundamental physical sciences and engineering. He received a
B.A. degree in Chemical Physics in 1974 from Rice University and his Ph.D. in Physical
Chemistry from U. C. Berkeley in 1978. He was a Member of Technical Staff at AT&T Bell
Labs from 1978-80 and a faculty member (Assistant, Associate and Full Professor) of the
Chemistry Department at UCLA from 1980 – 1995. He joined HP Labs in 1995 to found the
Quantum Science Research group, which originally focused on fundamental research at the
nanometer scale. His primary scientific research during the past thirty years has been in the
areas of solid-state chemistry and physics, and their applications to technology. This has evolved
into the areas of nanostructures and chemically-assembled materials, with an emphasis on the
thermodynamics of size and shape. Most recently, he has examined the fundamental limits of
information and computing, which has led to his current research in nano-electronics, -ionics and
-photonics. In 2008, a team of researchers he led announced that they had built and
demonstrated the first intentional memristor, the fourth and final fundamental electronic circuit
element, complementing and completing the capacitor, resistor and inductor. This
announcement led to several forms of recognition, including top technology of the year by PC
World and Innovator of the Year from the publication EETimes. He has received awards for
business, scientific and academic achievement, including the 2007 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal for
contributions to Chemistry, the 2004 Joel Birnbaum Prize (the highest internal HP award for
research), the 2004 Herman Bloch Medal for Industrial Research, the 2000 Julius Springer
Award for Applied Physics, the 2000 Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology, the Dreyfus Teacher-
Scholar Award and the Sloan Foundation Fellowship. He was named to the inaugural Scientific
American 50 Top Technology leaders in 2002 (and then again in 2005). In 2005, the US patent
collection that he has assembled at HP was named the world’s top nanotechnology intellectual
property portfolio by Small Times magazine, and the Chinese Academy of Science voted the
crossbar latch as the third most significant scientific breakthrough of the year (behind the Cassini
and Deep Impact space missions). He was a co-organizer and co-editor (with Paul Alivisatos
and Mike Roco) of the workshop and book “Vision for Nanotechnology in the 21st Century”,
respectively, that led to the establishment of the U. S. National Nanotechnology Initiative in
2000. He has been awarded over 90 US patents with more than sixty pending, he has over 100
non-US patents, he has published over 340 papers in reviewed scientific journals (with an hindex
of 51), and he has written several general articles for technical, business and general
interest publications (including Scientific American, IEEE Spectrum and Harvard Business
Review). One of his patents was named as one of five that will “transform business and
technology” by MIT’s Technology Review in 2000. He has presented hundreds of invited
plenary, keynote and named lectures at international scientific, technical and business events,
including one of the 2007 50th Anniversary Laureate Lectures on electrical and optical materials
for the TMS, the 2003 Joseph Franklin Lecture at Rice University, the 2004 Debye Lectures at
Cornell University, the 2004 Bloch Lecture at the University of Chicago, and the 2005 Carreker
Engineering Lecture at Georgia Tech.
See the following link for further information:
http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/qsr/index.html