Huamin Li

PhD

Huamin Li.

Huamin Li

PhD

Huamin Li

PhD

Specialty/Research Focus

Nano-scale electronics and optoelectronics based on low-dimensional materials

Biography Publications Teaching Research Latest News

Latest News

  • Highlights include making hydrogen fuel cell less expensive and keeping bridges open after earthquakes.

  • Electrical and electronics engineering research from universities across the U.S. shared their findings and celebrated some of the most significant achievements in electrical engineering during a three-day symposium on UB’s campus, last month.

  • It could reduce industry’s reliance on expensive platinum, which has hindered the growth of fuel cell electric vehicles, green power generation and more.

  • IEEE Spectrum quoted Huamin Li, assistant professor of electrical engineering, in a story about a transistor with a record-breaking gate length of just roughly one-third of a nanometer wide, only as thick as a single layer of carbon atoms, shedding light on how much smaller transistors can possibly get.
  • IEEE Spectrum interviews Huamin Li, assistant professor of electrical engineering, about new transistor technology. The article reports that by combining graphene and molybdenum disulfide, researchers have made a transistor that operates at half the voltage and has a higher current density than any state-of-the-art 2D transistor previously under development.
  • Electro Pages reports on a study of a new, two-dimensional transistor developed by UB researchers that’s made of graphene and molybdenum disulfide and could help usher in a new era of computing.
  • SemiConductor Digest, Science Daily and other news outlets report on a study of a new, two-dimensional transistor made of graphene and molybdenum disulfide that could help usher in a new era of computing.