SAN JOSE –
University of California-Berkeley professor Dr. Luke P. Lee will
unveil the future of medical innovations through functional BioPOETIC (Biologically-inspired
Photonics-Optofluidics-Electronics Technology-based IC) devices and packaging
when he keynotes the MEMS Packaging Symposium this month.
The symposium is sponsored
by the MicroElectronics Packaging and Test Engineering Council (Meptec), which announced
the final program is in place. MEMS
Market Evolution: From Technology Push to Market Pull takes place May 22, in San Jose.
Other presentations include
sessions on consumer and automotive applications:
- Karen Lightman, managing
director, MEMS Industry Group, on findings and recommendations from METRIC
2008, the annual meeting for members of MEMS Industry Group.
- Moshe Gat, R&D section manager, Wireless Semiconductor
Division, Avago Technologies, Size Reduction and Integration of RF
filters in Cellular Phones.
- Ken Yang, Ph.D., advanced MEMS
development manager, Analog
Devices, Three-Axis Motion Sensor Development and Production for
Consumer Electronics Market.
- Aaron Partridge, chief science
officer, SiTime, MEMS Timing –
More Function in a Smaller Package.
- Janusz Bryzek, LV Sensors, Inc. / Joseph R.
Mallon, Jr., Exept/Stanford University,
Green Killer Application: Wireless
Tire Pressure Monitoring.
- Jonathan Rheaume, Research
Specialist, UC Berkeley, Micro-Printed
Solid State Electrochemical Sensor for Monitoring Lean Direct Injection
Engines.
- Venkataraman Chandrasekaran, senior design engineer, Sensata Technologies, Sensors at
Sensata: Recent and Emerging Applications in Powertrain and Safety Systems.
Other
sessions cover wafer-level packaging and 3D ICs and MEMS and Biomedicine.
For
information: meptec.org.