College of Engineering Duo Named Fellows of the National Academy of Inventors

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Siva Sivakumar and Natalie Stingelin receive highest professional distinction for academic inventors

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Jason Maderer
College of Engineering
maderer@gatech.edu

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Siva Sivakumar and Natalie Stingelin receive highest professional distinction for academic inventors

Full Summary:

Siva Sivakumar and Natalie Stingelin receive highest professional distinction for academic inventors

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  • Natalie and Siva Natalie and Siva
    (image/png)

Two Georgia Tech College of Engineering professors are among this year’s Fellows of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI).

Raghupathy “Siva” Sivakumar and Natalie Stingelin will be inducted at the NAI Annual Meeting this coming June in Phoenix, Arizona. Election to NAI’s fellowship program is the highest professional distinction for academic inventors. 

Sivakumar, Georgia Tech’s first vice president of commercialization and chief commercialization officer, is being recognized for having demonstrated a highly prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on the quality of life, economic development, and welfare of society. He is a co-inventor on 22 issued patents, with 15 of them licensed to industry.

Sivakumar holds the Wayne J. Holman Chair in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, where he has served as a faculty member since 2000.

The NAI is honoring Stingelin for her significant contributions in the broader area of polymer physics and organic electronics and photonics. This includes the advancement of novel strategies that enable processing and design of soft electronic materials (such as organic semiconductors and inorganic/organic hybrid materials) with unique functional properties and the creation of innovative device architectures.

Stingelin holds a joint appointment in the School of Materials Science and Engineering and School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. She is an internationally recognized authority in the polymer field and serves as the director of Georgia Tech’s Center for Organic Photonics and Electronics. Stingelin is also an initiative lead for Georgia Tech’s Institute of Materials.

Sivakumar and Stingelin are among 164 honorees from more than 100 research universities and governmental and non-profit institutions worldwide.

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Additional Information

Groups

College of Engineering, CREATE-X, Research Horizons

Categories
Engineering
Related Core Research Areas
People and Technology
Newsroom Topics
Campus and Community, Science and Technology
Keywords
go-researchnews
Status
  • Created By: Jason Maderer
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Dec 13, 2021 - 5:32pm
  • Last Updated: Dec 13, 2021 - 5:32pm