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Lyon Institute of Nanotechnology (INL) |
The Lyon Institute
of Nanotechnology (INL) is a fundamental and applied research
laboratory in the field of micro- and nano-technology. Its mission is
to conduct research towards the development of fully-fledged
technologies for a broad range of application sectors (semiconductors
and micro-electronics, telecoms, energy, health, biology, industrial
control, defence, environment).
Research is organised around four main topics (organized in departments):
The research programs draw on the resources of the
Lyon-based Nanolyon technology platform.
A transversal research operation is specifically dedicated to the
development of Nanocharacterization tools and techniques.
The laboratory is situated on the campuses of Ecole Centrale de Lyon, INSA
Lyon, University of Lyon 1 and CPE. It comprises 125 permanent staff and
approximately 120 non-permanent staff. The annual budget excluding salaries is
about 3.8 M€.
The management team is made up of Guy HOLLINGER (director), Catherine BRU-CHEVALLIER
(vice-director for the INSA-UCB site)
and Christian SEASSAL (vice-director for the ECL site).
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CNRS tenured research scientist recruitment drive |
Under the auspices of the CNRS, INL is actively seeking excellent quality "CR2"- and "CR1"-level candidates to contribute or lead scientific and technological research in the following high-priority fields:
- Integration of new electronic and photonic functions on Silicon (material, devices and systems issues).
- Sensors, Microsystems and Sensor networks for health
- 3rd generation Photovoltaics
- Bottom up nanotechnologies and nanobiotechnologies.
Candidates will apply to the National Committee, mainly under section 8.
For more information, please consult the CNRS website
Contact:
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(Director of INL) or relevant research group leaders.
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Best Student Paper Award 2011 by IEEE Photonics Society and UK Silicon Photonics |
Corrado Sciancalepore, PhD student in the Nanophotonics team, received the Best Student Paper Award 2011 by IEEE Photonics Society and UK Silicon Photonics for his work on CMOS-compatible ultra-compact VCSELs presented during the 8th Annual IEEE Conference, Group IV Photonics held in London on 14-16 September 2011. This work has been developed within the framework of the European project HELIOS.
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