Dresden nanoelectronics researcher receives prize from the American Physical Society
Thomas Mikolajick, Professor of Nanoelectronics at the Technische Universität Dresden (TUD) and Scientific Director of NaMlab gGmbH, will be awarded the James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials 2026 together with his colleague Sayeef Salahudduin from UC Berkeley.
The prize is based on work carried out at NaMlab gGmbH. The TUD subsidiary works closely with the semiconductor and microelectronics industry to research new materials for micro- and nanoelectronics and components based on them.
In 2006, Tim Böscke, then a doctoral student at Qimonda AG in Dresden, discovered that thin, doped hafnium oxide films can be ferroelectric. In contrast to previously known ferroelectrics such as PZT (lead zirconium titanate), the outstanding properties of ferroelectric materials can be easily integrated into a semiconductor process. Hafnium oxide has been a standard material in semiconductor electronics for around 20 years.
NaMLab gGmbH, headed by Prof. Mikolajick, took up this initially unexpected discovery after the insolvency of Qimonda, made a decisive contribution to understanding the effect and researched various possible applications. As a result, the effect, which has since been closely associated with NaMLab gGmbH, has become known both in the industrial environment and in the academic world.
"The award is a great honor and recognition of our research. With our work on ferroelectricity, we not only want to realize new non-volatile memories, but also open up new possibilities in the field of chips for artificial intelligence," said Mikolajick about the prize.
The James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials recognizes and promotes outstanding achievements in the science and application of new materials. This includes the discovery of new classes of materials, the observation of novel phenomena in known materials that lead to fundamentally new applications and scientific findings, as well as theoretical and experimental work that contributes significantly to the understanding of such phenomena. The prize is endowed with 10,000 US dollars and has been awarded by the American Physical Society every year since 1975.