Deep Jariwala Awarded Young Scientist Prize in Semiconductors from IUPAP

Deep Jariwala receives his IUPAP Young Scientist Award and medal.
Deep Jariwala (center) received the 2022 Young Scientist Prize in Semiconductors from Young Dong Kim (left), Chair of IUPAP’s C8 Commission on Semiconductors, and Klaus von Klitzing (right), the recipient of the 1985 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the quantum hall effect.

Deep Jariwala, Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, has been awarded the 2022 Young Scientist Prize in Semiconductors from the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP).

The scholarly society, which celebrated its centennial anniversary this year, at its conference, recognizes the work of rising stars in a variety of subfields. Candidates for Young Scientist prizes must be nominated and endorsed by senior researchers in their field and be within eight years of receiving their doctorate.

The Young Scientist Prize in Semiconductors is awarded every two years and comes with a 1,000-euro honorarium and a IUPAP medal.

Jariwala’s award was given in recognition of his “pioneering studies on exciton-polaritons and electronic heterostructures of two-dimensional semiconductors.” It was presented at the International Conference on the Physics of Semiconductors, which was held in Sydney, Australia, at the end of June.

Jariwala also received the IEEE Photonics Society Young Investigator Award earlier this year.

Share: