Razeghi received a bachelor's degree in Nuclear Physics from Tehran University, then her doctorate from Université de Paris, France. In 1986, she became the head of Thomson-CSF Exploratory Materials Lab where she developed the metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) epitaxial technique. Razeghi is currently the Walter P. Murphy Professor and Director of the Center for Quantum Devices, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Northwestern University. She created the program in solid-state engineering (SSE) at Northwestern and has supervised over 50 PhD students and over 20 Master's students. Professor Razeghi won the Benjamin Franklin Medal for Electrical Engineering in 2018 and the Jan Czochralski Gold Medal in 2016. She holds 62 patents and has published 20 books and more than 1000 papers. Her h-index is 102.
Research Keywords & Expertise
quantum cascade lasers...
Quantum materials
semiconductor detector
Semiconductor Device P...
type 2 detector and im...
semiconductor material...
Fingerprints
35%
quantum cascade lasers QCLs
Short Biography
Razeghi received a bachelor's degree in Nuclear Physics from Tehran University, then her doctorate from Université de Paris, France. In 1986, she became the head of Thomson-CSF Exploratory Materials Lab where she developed the metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) epitaxial technique. Razeghi is currently the Walter P. Murphy Professor and Director of the Center for Quantum Devices, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Northwestern University. She created the program in solid-state engineering (SSE) at Northwestern and has supervised over 50 PhD students and over 20 Master's students. Professor Razeghi won the Benjamin Franklin Medal for Electrical Engineering in 2018 and the Jan Czochralski Gold Medal in 2016. She holds 62 patents and has published 20 books and more than 1000 papers. Her h-index is 102.