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Kurtis Cantley, Ph.D.

Faculty

About Kurtis Cantley

Bio

Dr. Cantley received his Ph.D. in electrical engineering in December 2011 from the University of Texas at Dallas under the supervision of Prof. Eric Vogel. The main focus of his research was fabrication and simulation of novel low-temperature electronic devices for artificial neural systems, the first three years of which were funded by the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) fellowship. He also had the opportunity to work on a project centered around chemical and biological sensor FETs and associated detection circuitry as part of his post-doctoral research at UTD. Before moving to Texas, Dr. Cantley received his master’s degree in electrical engineering in 2007 from Purdue University, where his advisor was Prof. Mark Lundstrom. His thesis topic was the simulation of III-V materials in nanoscale transistors to determine their performance potential compared to silicon. While at Purdue, he was heavily involved with the Network for Computational Nanotechnology, and contributed to the deployment of simulation tools with graphical user interfaces on nanohub.org. The majority of his work was upgrading a program called NanoMOS, which subsequently experienced a surge in usage and now has over 94 tool citations in the literature. Prior to Purdue, Dr. Cantley was a student at Washington State University, graduating from the Honors College in 2005. He also obtained minors in math, physics, and music. For two summers while at WSU, Dr. Cantley participated in the National Security Internship Program (NSIP) at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, near his home town of Kennewick, WA.