Supriyo Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D.

Commonwealth Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

  • Richmond VA UNITED STATES
  • Engineering West Hall Room 238
sbandy@vcu.edu

Professor Bandyopadhyay has authored and co-authored over 400 research publications

Contact

Biography

Supriyo Bandyopadhyay is Commonwealth Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University. He received a B. Tech degree in Electronics and Electrical Communications Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India; an M.S degree in Electrical Engineering from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois; and a Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering from Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. He spent one year as a Visiting Assistant Professor at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana (1986-87) and then nine years on the faculty of University of Notre Dame. In 1996, he joined University of Nebraska-Lincoln as Professor of Electrical Engineering, and then in 2001, moved to Virginia Commonwealth University as a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, with a courtesy appointment as Professor of Physics. He directs the Quantum Device Laboratory in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Research in the laboratory has been frequently featured in national and international media. Its educational activities were highlighted in a pilot study conducted by the ASME to assess nanotechnology pipeline challenges. The laboratory has graduated many outstanding researchers who have won numerous national and international awards.

Prof. Bandyopadhyay has authored and co-authored over 400 research publications and presented over 150 invited or keynote talks at conferences and colloquia/seminars across four continents. He is the author of three popular textbooks, including the only English language textbook on spintronics. He is currently a member of the editorial boards of ten international journals and served in the editorial boards of ten others in the past. He has served in various committees of ~100 international conferences and workshops. He is the founding Chair of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Technical Committee on Spintronics and past-chair of the Technical Committee on Compound Semiconductor Devices and Circuits. He was an IEEE Electron Device Society Distinguished Lecturer (2005-2012) and an IEEE Nanotechnology Council Distinguished Lecturer (2016, 2017). He is a past Vice President of the IEEE Nanotechnology Council (in charge of conferences) and current Vice President in charge of publications. He served in the IEEE Fellow Committee (2016-2018). Prof. Bandyopadhyay is the winner of many awards and distinctions.

Industry Expertise

Education/Learning
Research

Areas of Expertise

Self-assembly of Regimented Nanostructure Arrays
Spintronics
Quantum Devices
Hot Carrier Transport in Nanostructures
Nanoelectronics
Quantum Computing
Nanomagnetism
Computing Paradigms
Optical Properties of Nanostructures
Coherent spin transport in Nanowires for Sensing and Information Processing
Nanowire-based Room Temperature Infrared Detectors

Accomplishments

University Award of Excellence

2017-08-23

Virginia Commonwealth University faculty award for performing in a superior manner in teaching, scholarly activity and service. One award is given to one faculty member in the University in any year. It is one of the highest awards the University can bestow on a faculty member. Dr. Bandyopadhyay is the only recipient of this award in the history of the College of Engineering.

Virginia's Outstanding Scientist

2016-02-15

Named by the Governor of the State of Virginia, 2016. One of two recipients in the State of Virginia in 2016. This award is given across all fields of engineering, science, mathematics and medicine.

Electrical and Computer Engineering Lifetime Achievement Award, VCU

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University, 2015. One of two such awards given in the department's history.

Show All +

Education

Purdue University

Ph.D.

Electrical Engineering

Southern Illinois University

M.S.

Electrical Engineering

Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

B.Tech

Electronics and Electrical Communications Engineering

Affiliations

  • American Physical Society
  • The Electrochemical Society
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: Past Vice President of Nanotechnology Council, Past Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices, Past Chair of the Technical Committee on Compound Semiconductor Devices and Circuits, Founding Chair of the Technical Committee on Spintronics
  • Institute of Physics (UK): Editorial Board Member of the journals Nanotechnology and Nano Futures

Media Appearances

Gov. Northam recognizes Outstanding Faculty Award recipients

Augusta Free Press  print

2018-03-02

Supriyo Bandyopadhyay is commonwealth professor of electrical and computer engineering at Virginia Commonwealth University where he has worked for 17 years as director of the Quantum Device Laboratory. Bandyopadhyay was named Virginia’s Outstanding Scientist by Governor Terry McAuliffe in 2016.

View More

Governor Northam recognizes outstanding faculty awards recipients

Virginia Secretary of Education  online

2018-03-01

RICHMOND - Governor Ralph Northam today recognized 12 Virginia educators as recipients of the 32nd annual Outstanding Faculty Award for excellence in teaching, research, and public service. The annual Outstanding Faculty Award program is administered by the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV) and sponsored by Dominion Energy.

“These outstanding educators have devoted their lives to research and teaching.” said Governor Northam. “Each has a proven track record of academic excellence and giving back to their communities. I am pleased to support these wonderful Virginia teachers and it is my privilege to recognize each of them with the Outstanding Faculty Award.”

The recipients, all faculty members from colleges and universities across the Commonwealth, were honored today during an awards ceremony at the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond.

“The 12 educators that we are recognizing play a pivotal role in the lives and successes of the people they teach and inspire,” said Secretary of Education Atif Qarni. “With this award we thank them for their service to students, to their institutions, and to the Commonwealth.”

“We are fortunate that Virginia is home to one of the world’s great systems of higher education,” said Peter Blake, director of SCHEV. “The Outstanding Faculty Awards recognize faculty members who have dedicated their lives to research, teaching, and mentorship. Their work improves the lives of everyone in the Commonwealth.”

The awards are being made through a $75,000 grant from the Dominion Energy Charitable Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Dominion Energy and the sponsor of the Outstanding Faculty Awards for the 14th year.

“Dominion Energy is pleased to partner with SCHEV once again to honor Virginia’s outstanding educators,” said Hunter A. Applewhite, president of the Dominion Energy Charitable Foundation. “Every year, I am impressed and humbled by the dedication shown by these teachers and researchers to guide and inspire our young people to excel in the classroom and in life.”

VCU Engineering Professor receives Governor's highest award for Teaching

Virginia Commonwealth University  online

2018-02-07

Supriyo Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D., Commonwealth Professor in the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Engineering, has been named a recipient of the 2018 State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV) Outstanding Faculty Award

View More

Show All +

Research Focus

Spintronics

Nanostructures

2017-01-03

Spintronics is the science and technology of storing, sensing, processing and communicating information with the quantum mechanical spin properties of electrons.

View More

Straintronics

Nanomagnets

2017-01-03

Straintronics is the technology of rotating the magnetization direction of nanomagnets with electrically generated mechanical stress. It has applications in extremely energy-efficient Boolean and non-Boolean computing.

View More

Infrared photodetection

Nanowires

2017-01-03

Infrared photodetectors have applications in night vision, collision avoidance systems, healthcare, mine detection, monitoring of global warming, forensics, etc. Room temperature detection of infrared light is enabled via quantum engineering in nanowires and by exploiting spin properties of electrons.

View More

Patents

Magneto-elastic non-volatile multiferroic logic and memory with ultralow energy dissipation

9379162

2016-06-28

Memory cells, non-volatile logic gates, and combinations thereof have magneto-tunneling junctions (MTJs) which are switched using potential differences across a piezoelectric layer in elastic contact with a magnetostrictive nanomagnet of an MTJ. One or more pairs of electrodes are arranged about the MTJ for supplying voltage across the piezoelectric layer for switching. A permanent magnetic field may be employed to change the positions of the stable magnetic orientations of the magnetostrictive nanomagnet. Exemplary memory cells and universal non-volatile logic gates show dramatically improved performance characteristics, particularly with respect to energy dissipation and error-resilience, over existing methods and architectures for switching MTJs such as spin transfer torque (STT) techniques.

Room temperature nanowire IR, visible and UV photodetectors

8946678

2015-02-03

Room temperature IR and UV photodetectors are provided by electrochemical self-assembly of nanowires. The detectivity of such IR detectors is up to ten times better than the state of the art. Broad peaks are observed in the room temperature absorption spectra of 10-nm diameter nanowires of CdSe and ZnS at photon energies close to the bandgap energy, indicating that the detectors are frequency selective and preferably detect light of specific frequencies. Provided is a photodetector comprising: an aluminum substrate; a layer of insulator disposed on the aluminum substrate and comprising an array of columnar pores; a plurality of semiconductor nanowires disposed within the pores and standing vertically relative to the aluminum substrate; a layer of nickel disposed in operable communication with one or more of the semiconductor nanowires; and wire leads in operable communication with the aluminum substrate and the layer of nickel for connection with an electrical circuit.

Planar multiferroic/magnetostrictive nanostructures as memory elements, two-stage logic gates and four-state logic elements for information processing

8921962

2014-12-30

A magnetostrictive-piezoelectric multiferroic single- or multi-domain nanomagnet whose magnetization can be rotated through application of an electric field across the piezoelectric layer has a structure that can include either a shape-anisotropic mangnetostrictive nanomagnet with no magnetocrystalline anisotropy or a circular nanomagnet with biaxial magnetocrystalline anisotropy with dimensions of nominal diameter and thickness. This structure can be used to write and store binary bits encoded in the magnetization orientation, thereby functioning as a memory element, or perform both Boolean and non-Boolean computation, or be integrated with existing magnetic tunneling junction (MTJ) technology to perform a read operation by adding a barrier layer for the MTJ having a high coercivity to serve as the hard magnetic layer of the MTJ, and electrical contact layers of a soft material with small Young's modulus.

Show All +

Research Grants

A Probability Correlator for All-Magnetic Probabilistic Computing

National Science Foundation

2020-06-01

Probabilistic computing is a computing paradigm that can solve certain problems more efficiently than traditional digital computing. While digital computing deals with deterministic binary bits that are either 0 or 1, probabilistic computing deals with probabilistic (p-) bits that are sometimes 0 and sometimes 1. This is distinct from quantum computing that deals with quantum (qu-) bits which are a superposition of 0 and 1 (and hence a mixture of both 0 and 1 all the time). Quantum computing is more powerful than probabilistic computing, which, in turn, is more powerful than traditional digital computing in many applications. However, quantum computing usually requires the most hardware resources and digital computing the least, with probabilistic computing in-between the two. Most of the hardware resources in probabilistic computing is expended in generating specific correlations between two or more p-bit streams. In this project, we will study and demonstrate a system that will greatly reduce the hardware burden associated with generating correlations. This will be done by using electrically-generated strain in patterned nanomagnetic devices. The results will make probabilistic computing much more efficient than it currently is. The project will educate K-12, undergraduate, and graduate students in this field to increase the pool of skilled scientists and engineers while advancing the field of computing. This work is performed with Prof. Jean-Ann Incorvia from the Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin.

EAGER: Spintronic extreme sub-wavelength and super-gain active electronically scanned antenna (AESA) enabled by phonon-magnon-plasmon-photon coupling.

National Science Foundation $220000

2022-08-01

A serious shortcoming of conventional antennas is that their efficiencies plummet when they are made much smaller than the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation they transmit. This is an impediment to building ultra-small antennas that can be medically implanted in a patient or embedded in a stealth device for defense or crime-fighting. This roadblock has been recently overcome by a novel genre of antennas implemented with magnetostrictive nanomagnets built on a piezoelectric substrate. A periodic electric field applied to the substrate periodically strains the nanomagnets, which makes their magnetizations oscillate in time and emit electromagnetic waves. The phenomenon that underlies this effect is phonon-magnon-photon coupling. The efficiencies of these novel antennas were found to exceed the theoretical limits on the efficiencies of traditional antennas by more than 100,000 times. The present research will introduce an additional feature by coupling electric charge oscillations (called plasmons) into the antennas by modifying their structure, which can significantly improve the antenna performance. Moreover, by manipulating the direction of the periodic electric field applied to the substrate, the direction of the strain wave propagating in the substrate can be changed, which may allow capability to steer the radiated electromagnetic beam in space, thereby implementing an active electronically scanned antenna (AESA). These antennas will have the potential to open up many new embedded applications, e.g., medically implanted devices that communicate with external monitors while consuming miniscule amounts of energy, ultra-small stealthy listening devices, personal communicators and wearable electronics. Apart from the fundamental knowledge and technological impact the proposed research will benefit society by producing graduate and undergraduate students trained in nanofabrication, characterization and measurement, as well as in device simulation and design. Particular attention will be paid to entrepreneurship opportunities, increasing K-12 and minority participation through various programs, and educating public through popular lectures and internet blogs.

View more

Strained topological insulator spin field effect transistor

VCU QUEST Fund $50000

2023-08-01

The ‘transistor’ is a three-terminal electronic device where the current flowing between two of the terminals is varied with a voltage or a current applied to the third terminal.

A major drawback of the transistor is its energy-inefficiency, which is a serious shortcoming because 10% of the energy produced in developed nations today is consumed by electronics/computers (i.e., by transistors). By the year 2030, it is expected to balloon to 25%, and by 2050 to nearly 100%, leaving nothing for other infrastructure. This has prompted research in transistor-alternatives (or different avatars of the transistor) that are extremely frugal in their use of energy. Many of them are based on the notion of manipulating the quantum mechanical spin degree of freedom of electrons (instead of the usual charge degree of freedom) to elicit transistor-like functionality. They are called “Spin Field Effect Transistors” or SPINFETs. This proposal is intended to experimentally demonstrate a novel genre of SPINFETs employing strained topological insulators. Topological insulators are a new class of quantum materials (e.g. Bi2Te3, Bi2Se3 etc.) that exhibit topologically protected spin textures and intriguing properties such as spin-momentum locking that are not exhibited by any other class of materials. We have termed this invention the “strained topological insulator spin field effect transistor” (STI-SPINFET). It utilizes spin interference in a topological insulator to realize transistor action. The interference is controlled by applying mechanical strain on the topological insulator using a piezoelectric material integrated with the topological material. A voltage applied to the piezoelectric generates strain in the topological insulator which changes the spin interference within it and that changes the current flowing through it, thereby realizing transistor functionality.

This unusual modality of transistor action results in a unique transistor transfer characteristic which makes it possible to implement a frequency multiplier with a single STI-SPINFET. Frequency multipliers are used in myriad communication systems (radar, cell phones, 5G/6G networks) and their function is to increase the frequency of any signal by an arbitrary factor for the purpose of signal modulation/demodulation.

Show All +

Courses

EGRE 620: Electron Theory of Solids

Introduces graduate students to quantum theory of solids with emphasis on applications in solid state devices.

EGRE 621: Introduction to Spintronics

Introduces advanced graduate students to various facets of spintronics, spin physics, spin devices and elements of spin based quantum computing.

EGRE 610: Research Practices in Electrical and Computer Engineering

Introduces graduate students to grant writing, paper writing and perfects their skills in oral presentations.

Show All +

Selected Articles

Spin Wave Electromagnetic Nano‐Antenna Enabled by Tripartite Phonon‐Magnon‐Photon Coupling

Advanced Science, 9(8), 2104644 (2022)

Raisa Fabiha, Jonathan Lundquist, Sudip Majumder, Erdem Topsakal, Anjan Barman, Supriyo Bandyopadhya

2022-02-15

Tripartite coupling between phonons, magnons, and photons in a periodic array of elliptical magnetostrictive nanomagnets delineated on a piezoelectric substrate to form a 2D two-phase multiferroic crystal is investigated. Surface acoustic waves (SAW) (phonons) of 5–35 GHz frequency launched into the substrate cause the magnetizations of the nanomagnets to precess at the frequency of the wave, giving rise to confined spin-wave modes (magnons) within the nanomagnets. The spin waves, in turn, radiate electromagnetic waves (photons) into the surrounding space at the SAW frequency. Here, the phonons couple into magnons, which then couple into photons. This tripartite phonon-magnon-photon coupling is thus exploited to implement an extreme sub-wavelength electromagnetic antenna whose measured radiation efficiency and antenna gain exceed the approximate theoretical limits for traditional antennas of the same dimensions by more than two orders of magnitude at some frequencies. Micro-magnetic simulations are in excellent agreement with experimental observations and provide insight into the spin-wave modes that couple into radiating electromagnetic modes to implement the antenna.

View more

Acousto‐Plasmo‐Magnonics: Coupling Spin Waves with Hybridized Phonon‐Plasmon Waves in a 2D Artificial Magnonic Crystal Deposited on a Plasmonic Material

Advanced Functional Materials, 2304127 (2023)

Sreya Pal, Pratap Kumar Pal, Raisa Fabiha, Supriyo Bandyopadhyay, Anjan Barman

2023-06-01

Coupling between spin waves (SWs) and other waves in nanostructured media has emerged as an important topic of research because of the rich physics and the potential for disruptive technologies. Herein, a new phenomenon is reported in this family involving coupling between SWs and hybridized phonon-plasmon waves in a 2D periodic array of magnetostrictive nanomagnets deposited on a silicon substrate with an intervening thin film of aluminum that acts as a source of surface plasmons. Hybridized phonon-plasmon waves naturally form in this composite material when exposed to ultrashort laser pulses and they non-linearly couple with SWs to produce a new breed of waves – acousto-plasmo-spin waves that can exhibit a “frequency comb” spanning more than one octave. This phenomenon, that we call acousto-plasmo-magnonics resulting from tripartite coupling of magnons, phonons and plasmons, is studied with time-resolved magneto-optical-Kerr-effect microscopy. The findings also reveal the presence of parametric amplification in this system; energy is transferred from the hybridized phonon-plasmon modes to the acousto-plasmo-spin wave modes to amplify the latter. This opens a path to design novel active metamaterials with tailored and enhanced response. It may enable high-efficiency magneto-mechanical-plasmonic frequency mixing in the GHz−THz frequency regime and provide a unique avenue to study non-linear coupling, parametric amplification, and frequency comb physics.

View more

Strained topological insulator spin field effect transistor

Materials for Quantum Technology, 3, 015001 (2023)

Supriyo Bandyopadhyay

2023-03-03

The notion of a spin field effect transistor, where transistor action is realized by manipulating the spin degree of freedom of charge carriers instead of the charge degree of freedom, has captivated researchers for at least three decades. These transistors are typically implemented by modulating the spin orbit interaction in the transistor’s channel with a gate voltage, which causes gate-controlled spin precession of the current carriers, and that modulates the channel current flowing between the ferromagnetic source and drain contacts to implement transistor action. Here, we introduce a new concept for a spin field effect transistor which does not exploit spin-orbit interaction. Its channel is made of the conducting surface of a strained three dimensional topological insulator (3D-TI) thin film and the transistor function is elicited by straining the channel region with a gate voltage (using a piezoelectric under-layer) to modify the energy dispersion relation, or the Dirac velocity, of the TI surface states. This rotates the spins of the carriers in the channel and that modulates the current flowing between the ferromagnetic source and drain contacts to realize transistor action. We call it a strained-topological-insulator-spin-field-effect-transistor, or STI-SPINFET. Its conductance on/off ratio is too poor to make it useful as a switch, but it may have other uses, such as an extremely energy-efficient stand-alone single-transistor frequency multiplier.

View more

Show All +