The Center for Interface Sciences for Emerging Devices & Systems (CISEDS) is proud to have the Birck Nanotechnology Center in Purdue and The NC State Nanofabrication Facility as the home for many of our research projects. The Birck Nanotechnology Center is a 186,000 sq ft. facility with Class 1-10-100 and 1000 nano¬fabrication cleanroom, equipped with the latest technology to support ongoing research in the areas of nano electronics, photonics, energy, MEMS, nanobio technology and nano-manufacturing. The NC State Nanofabrication Facility also provides a wide range of nanofabrication capabilities to support a diverse set of projects, including standard thin film processing tools. Both facilities provide a melting pot for a community of top-notch researchers from academia, government labs and industry, representing a variety of disciplines. This allows CISEDS to conduct cutting-edge research in the areas of Flexible and Stretchable Electronics, Heterogeneous integration and IC packaging, Next-Generation SiC MOSFETs Powering the EV Revolution, Quantum materials, heterostructures, and advanced characterizations, Thermal Interfaces and Management of power electronics and integrated circuits, Ultra Wide Bandgap Semiconductor Devices for Power Conversion and High-Frequency Applications, Wide Bandgap Semiconductor Devices for Power Conversion and High-Frequency Applications.
RTNN INCLUDED NINE core shared user facilities
1) Analytical Instrumentation Facility
2) Chapel Hill Analytical and Nanofabrication Laboratory (CHANL)
3) Chemical Analysis and Spectroscopy Laboratory (CASL)
4) Duke Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Center (DMRSC)
5) NCSU Nanofabrication Lab (NNF)
7) Public Communication of Science & Technology Project (PCOST)