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facts about jerry woodall.html

15 Facts About Jerry Woodall

facts about jerry woodall.html1.

Jerry M Woodall is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of California, Davis who is widely known for his revolutionary work on LEDs and semiconductors.

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Jerry Woodall was born in Takoma Park, Maryland in 1938, which is located in Washington DC.

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Jerry Woodall's father was a plastering contractor, his mother a homemaker, and he had three siblings: one older brother and two half sisters.

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Jerry Woodall went to a Seventh Day Adventist grade school, and Takoma Academy for high school.

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Jerry Woodall then worked as a Staff Engineer at Clevite Transistor Products in Waltham, MA for two years.

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Jerry Woodall then made a shift in his life to focus on academic work.

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Jerry Woodall taught Electrical Engineering at Yale University from 1999 to 2004, but he returned to Purdue in 2005.

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Jerry Woodall's research is largely focused on developing novel electronic materials and microelectronic devices that can greatly impact society.

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Jerry Woodall is referred to as the "father of heterojunction devices" due to his seminal work inventing and developing the modern implementations of heterojunction bipolar transistors and pseudomorphic high electron mobility transistors.

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Jerry Woodall's lab has designed a hybrid solar power conversion system that can operate at moderate temperatures without the need for traditional cooling systems.

11.

Jerry Woodall is an American inventor and scientist best known for his invention of the first commercially viable heterojunction material GaAlAs for red LEDs used in automobile brake lights and traffic lights, CD and DVD players, TV remote controls and computer networks.

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Jerry Woodall was elected to National Academy of Engineering in 1989, and Honorary Member of The Electrochemical Society in 2007.

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Jerry Woodall is the fellow of American Vacuum Society, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and American Physical Society.

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Recently, Jerry Woodall gave a lecture at Massachusetts Institute of Technology outlining his current contributions to the field of renewable energy and energy storage.

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Jerry Woodall's work continues to greatly contribute to science and renewable energy research, and will be crucial as the world transitions to intermittent energy sources in the future.