Kevin Walsh

Also published under:K. M. Walsh, Kevin M. Walsh, K. Walsh

Affiliation

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, USA

Topic

Gauge Factor,Cantilever Beam,Conductive Ink,End Of The Beam,Glancing Angle Deposition,Impedance,Physical Vapor Deposition,Polyethylene Terephthalate,Printed Circuit Board,Printing Process,Resistance Change,Strain Gauges,Thermal Curing,Van Der Pauw,Wide Range Of Materials,3D Nanostructures,Additive Manufacturing,Aerosol Jet,Aerosol Jet Printing,Aerosol Printing,Arc Length,Basal Width,Beam Theory,Buffered Oxide Etchant,Charge Generation,Chemical Vapor Deposition,Conductive,Depletion Region,Digital Micrometer,Digital Multimeter,Drain Current,Electron Beam Evaporation,Electron Beam Lithography,Experimental Design,Film Thickness,Flexible Electronics,Free-standing Membranes,GaN HEMT,GaN Layer,Gas Molecules,Glass Slides,Heat Sink,Hydraulic Diameter,Incident Angle,Ink Materials,Linear Model,Membranes For Applications,Mm In Width,Nanoimprint Lithography,Nanopillars,

Biography

Kevin Walsh is currently the Associate Dean of Research, Graduate Studies, and Facilities with the Speed School of Engineering, University of Louisville. He is also the Fife Endowed Professor of electrical and computer engineering and the Founder of the U.S. $30M 10 000 sq.ft UofL Micro/NanoTechnology Center (MNTC), Louisville, KY, USA. He is the Director of the KY Multiscale Advanced Manufacturing Node (www.kymultiscale.net), which is part of the 16-site National Science Foundation National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure network (NSF NNCI). He has authored or coauthored over 150 technical articles in the areas of micro/nanotechnology, sensors, semiconductors, microelectronics, and MEMS. His research group has received over U.S. $35M of external research funding from Department of Defense (DoD), design of experiment (DOE), NSF, NASA, NIH, and industry.
Prof. Walsh has 12 awarded patents and is the Co-Founder of four technical startup companies. He has taught over 20 different courses, advised over 30 completed theses, and has twice been presented with the School’s top Research Award. In 2014, he was inducted into the National Academy of Inventors.