Organization:IEEE Electron Devices Society
The IEEE Electron Devices Society is a professional society of the IEEE.
History
The IEEE Electron Devices Society was initially formed as the IRE Electron Tubes and Solid-State Devices Committee in 1951, and quickly became a professional group: in March 1952 it was called the IRE Professional Group on Electron Devices. After IRE's merger with AIEE in 1963, the group became the IEEE Professional Technical Group on Electron Devices, which merged with the Solid State Devices Committee in 1963, and with the New Energy Sources Committee in 1964, becoming the IEEE Electron Devices Group. In 1976 the group changed its name to the IEEE Electron Devices Society.[1]
EDS Field of Interest
In its constitution, IEEE EDS states that its Field of Interest is "all aspects of engineering, physics, theory, experiment and simulation of electron and ion devices involving insulators, metals, organic materials, plasmas, semiconductors, quantum-effect materials, vacuum, and emerging materials. Specific applications of these devices include bioelectronics, biomedical, computation, communications, displays, electro and micro mechanics, imaging, micro actuators, optical, photovoltaics, power, sensors and signal processing.
The Society is concerned with research, development, design and manufacture related to materials, processing, technology, and applications of such devices, and scientific, technical, educational and other activities that contribute to the advancement of this field".[2]
EDS Strategic Goals
1. Be the first place that students and technical professionals working in the field of electron devices go to for the information and services that are indispensable for their success.
2. Equitably foster diverse and inclusive communities of practice to facilitate information exchange, collaboration and professional development for greater technological innovation and excellence to benefit all humanity.
3. Establish a process and allocate sufficient resources to support innovative projects that apply electron devices and technology for humanity to address one or more of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
4. Develop synergistic relationships outside EDS to accelerate technological progress in multi-disciplinary areas.
EDS Publications
The IEEE Electron Devices Society publishes a broad range of publications,[3] including:
- Electrochemical and Solid-State Letters (ECS) (Print)
- IEEE Electron Device Letters (EDL)
- IEEE Embedded Systems Letters (Print & Electronic)
- IEEE Nanotechnology Magazine (Print & Electronic)
- IEEE Photonics Journal (Electronic)
- IEEE Sensors Journal (Print)
- IEEE Solid State Circuits Magazine (Print & Electronic)
- IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity (T-AP) (Print & Electronic)
- IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems (Print & Electronic)
- IEEE Transactions on Device and Materials Reliability (CD ROM)
- IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices (T-ED)
- IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology (T-NT) (Print & Electronic)
- IEEE Transactions on Semiconductor Manufacturing (T-SM) (Print)
- Journal of Display Technology (Print & Electronic)
- Journal of the Electron Devices Society (Electronic, open access).
- Journal of Electronic Materials (J-EM) (Print & Electronic)
- Journal of Lightwave Technology (J-LT) (Print)
- Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems (J-MEMS) (Print)
- Journal on Flexible Electronics (J-FLEX) (Print & Electronic)[4]
- EDS Archival Collection DVD (EDL, T-ED, IEDM, & EDS Newsletter)
- EDS DVD Update Package (DVD)
- Technology Management Package (Print & Electronic)
- Technology Management Package Mixed Media (Print & Electronic)
EDS Conferences
EDS sponsors and co-sponsors multiple conferences annually.[5], including:
- Electron Devices Technology and Manufacturing (EDTM)
- International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM)
- IEEE International Flexible Electronics Technology Conference (IFETC)[6]
IEEE Future Directions Communities
The IEEE Electron Device Society is also a member of these cross-disciplinary IEEE communities:
1. IEEE Smart Village (under IEEE Foundation)
2. IEEE Internet-of-Things
3. IEEE Future Networks
5. IEEE Brain
6. IEEE Quantum
See also
- List of fellows of IEEE Electron Devices Society
References
- ↑ IEEE Global History Network (2011). "IEEE Electron Devices Society History". IEEE History Center. http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/index.php/IEEE_Electron_Devices_Society_History.
- ↑ IEEE EDS Field of Interest Statement
- ↑ IEEE EDS Publications
- ↑ "IEEE Journal on Flexible Electronics (J-FLEX)" (in en). https://ieee-jflex.org/. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- ↑ IEEE EDS Conferences
- ↑ "IEEE International Flexible Electronics Conference (IFETC)" (in en). https://ifetc.org/web/index.php. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
External links