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School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science

Antennas and Electromagnetics Group seminar – 26th of May 2026

When: Tuesday, May 26, 2026, 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Where: Hybrid mode: In-person: Graduate Centre GC205 + Online

On the 26th of May 2026 we will have a talk from Dr Young Chul Kim. The title of Dr Young Chul Kim’s talk is: “Bridging the Gap: From Lab-Scale Research to Mass Production in Silicon Photonics”. The full details of the talk are given in the attachment.

Synopsis: As the demand for high-speed data processing in AI and data centers grows, Silicon Photonics has emerged as a key technology to overcome the limits of traditional electrical interconnects. However, moving a device from a university lab to a commercial semiconductor "Fab" involves significant technical challenges. In this seminar, Dr. Young Chul Kim will share his experience transitioning from academic research to industrial process design at Samsung Electronics.

The seminar will cover:
•The Shift in Perspective: Why "Yield" is more important than "Best Performance" in mass production.
•Manufacturing Hurdles: Dealing with wafer-edge uniformity and 3D process constraints.
•Technical Complexity: Managing high-density implant steps and the unique requirements of curved waveguide patterns, which are rare in traditional logic design.
•Design Strategy: How engineers use layout workarounds to overcome equipment capacity limits.

This seminar aims to provide graduate students with a realistic view of modern semiconductor manufacturing and the practical engineering required to bring photonic innovations to the real world.

Speaker bio:

Dr. Young Chul Kim is a semiconductor professional currently specializing in Silicon Photonics process design at Samsung Electronics. He earned his Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Ajou Univer-sity, where his research focused on ultrafast carrier dynamics and optoelectronic devices based on 2D materials like MoS2 and Graphene. Throughout his academic career, he published numer-ous papers on advanced optical imaging and nanofabrication . Now at Samsung’s Foundry Divi-sion, he manages the transition of Silicon Photonics from research-level devices to High-Volume Manufacturing (HVM), focusing on yield management and complex process-design co-optimiza-tion.

The speaker has also kindly agreed on sharing his career development journey and his experience at Samsung Electronics with us at the end of the seminar. We encourage our PhD students and PDRAs to attend, as we believe it would be highly beneficial and inspiring.

 

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