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Texas Instruments' Hal Edwards elected TI Fellow

Texas Instruments has elected Hal Edwards as a TI Fellow for his innovation in developing highly differentiated process technologies for TI’s integrated power semiconductor devices. Edwards is among three TI innovators in 2018 to receive this prestigious title on TI’s Technical Ladder, which recognizes employees who fuel innovation across the company in support of business goals.

TI Fellows are elected by their peers and TI’s senior leadership team annually and represent less than one percent of TI’s total eligible population.

“Hal Edwards is a talented technologist who is developing breakthrough power technology for a range of products,” said Bob Todd, TI Fellow and power process development manager. “His expertise and contributions will shape TI’s power technology roadmap and enable game-changing power products for many years to come.”

In addition to serving as a TI Fellow, Edwards is focused on creating power transistors and related novel devices. He conducts advanced silicon device research at TI and with the company’s university partners, such as The University of Texas at Dallas, to study new concepts impacting the future of power. In addition, Edwards serves as adjunct professor for Southern Methodist University’s Department of Physics where he occasionally teaches graduate-level physics courses.

“Of all the people I have worked with in 30 years of doing research, I have found that Hal is unique in marrying a profound understanding of fundamental solid-state physics with a detailed practical knowledge of the engineering aspects needed in industrial semiconductor design and fabrication,” said Professor Mark Lee, chairman of the Physics Department at UTD. 

Edwards joined TI in 1995 as a researcher. He later focused on CMOS technology development and worked as a lab manager before spending 2009 as one of the first researchers in TI’s Kilby Labs, the company’s technology research center and incubator for many of the world-changing technologies in TI products today. Since 2010, Edwards has developed advanced power transistors in TI’s Analog Technology Development organization.

Edwards earned a bachelor’s degree in Physics from Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, where he received the Carrington Award. He holds a doctorate degree in Physics from the University of Texas at Austin. During his doctorate studies, Edwards held the John Wheeler Graduate Fellowship and was elected to Phi Kappa Phi.  His research from the 1990’s on superconductivity, nanotechnology, and quantum heat engines is frequently cited in applied physics literature.

In addition to his technical credentials, Edwards is also involved in the Dallas community as the Scoutmaster of Boy Scout Troop 777 in Richardson, Texas.

About Texas Instruments

Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) is a global semiconductor design and manufacturing company that develops analog integrated circuits (ICs) and embedded processors. By employing the world’s brightest minds, TI creates innovations that shape the future of technology. TI is helping approximately 100,000 customers transform the future, today. Learn more at www.ti.com.