Mehrdad Nikoonahad

Dr. Mehrdad Nikoonahad is an Iranian-American electrical engineer, technologist, innovator and entrepreneur.

Background and education

Dr. Nikoonahad received his B.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in Electronic Engineering from University College London (UCL), England, in 1979 and 1983, respectively. Here, he also completed two years of postdoctoral work. His Ph.D. and postdoctoral work were concerned with acoustic imaging[1] and scanning microscopy and were carried out under the supervision of Sir Eric Ash. Dr. Nikoonahad became a Senior Member of the IEEE by nomination in 1989. In 1997 he completed the Executive Program for Growing Companies at the Graduate School of Business of Stanford University.

Career and business interests

Dr. Nikoonahad is Founder and CEO at PARTOE INC., a privately held company located in Menlo Park, California and focused on distributed power electronics for photovoltaic(PV) solar markets. He was formerly Co-founder and CEO at Solar Notion, Inc., a privately held company in Silicon Valley, set out to achieve grid parity for PV electricity through a radically new silicon process technology.

Dr. Nikoonahad was involved with a number of start-up, private, and public companies at the executive level, all in the high technology arena. He was formerly Vice President of Technology for Strategic Business Development at KLA-Tencor (KT) Corporation focusing on merger and acquisitions (M&A) and investment activity in the areas of equipment for microelectromechanical systems(MEMS), optical communication devices, magnetic media inspection and metrology, and for semiconductor manufacturing. He joined Tencor Instruments in Mountain View, California in 1992 when he proposed and helped develop a platform for a high-speed, laser-based, wafer inspection system, which, then for the first time, addressed the inspection needs for 0.25 micrometre semiconductor device fabrication technology during high volume production. That platform was subsequently named Advanced Inspection Technology (AIT) and during its peak times generated over $1 billion in revenue. Dr. Nikoonahad then managed development groups and extended that capability for smaller silicon geometries, using ultraviolet lasers. Subsequent to the AIT, he led numerous development teams for inspection and metrology products used in silicon manufacturing. Laser imaging, metals and dielectric thin film metrology, laser and spectral ellipsometry for dielectric film characterization, photothermal ellipsometry for implant measurement, chemical-mechanical planarization (CMP) end-point detection, optical CD (OCD), overlay characterization, and micro/macro defect inspection are among some the technologies that Dr. Nikoonahad and his teams have developed. He was Vice President of Technology for a new division of KT focused on integrated meteorology. He was also held an advisory role for the KT Venture Fund and was a member of the corporate Patent Review Committee. He was the winner of numerous innovation and patent awards while at KT.

Prior to KT he was at Philips research labs in Briarcliff Manor, New York where he served as Senior Member Technical Staff and led research on acoustic imaging, and medical ultrasound. Dr. Nikoonahad has been principal investigator on a number R&D projects for the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

He has authored or coauthored over 50 scientific papers, including a book chapter and is a named inventor on over 100 US patents and patent applications.

In 2019 he has been involved in mentoring participants of the StartupLab (an initiative offered by Clab Trento), a renowned international program selecting startup projects that have potential to scale worldwide. The program itself has been designed taking inspiration from the format inaugurated by Ycombinator. [2]

gollark: Did you sprite the antareans or something?
gollark: Or maybe double tap.
gollark: Long press?
gollark: Meanwhile, trade hub feedback thread... continues.
gollark: Are they actually likely to be different?

References

  1. "Scientists use sound to see through solids". New Scientist. June 10, 1982. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  2. "Mehrdad Nikoonahad | CLab Trento". clabtrento.it. Retrieved 2020-04-09.
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