Staff Directory

Michael Allan Huff

Email:
mahuff@nsf.gov
Phone:
(703) 292-2286
Room:
E 14456C
Organization:
ITE
Title:
Program Director

Biography:

Dr. Michael Huff came to the NSF with over 40 years experience in semiconductor technologies in both industry and academia.  

Dr. Huff founded the MEMS and Nanotechnology Exchange (MNX) at Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI) over 25 years ago that is a program established with DARPA funding to create the world's first truly semiconductor foundry network that continues to provide services to the R&D and industrial communities.  

The MNX serves as a model for semiconductor foundry networks (and hubs) established under the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act legislation.    

To date, the MNX has provided semiconductor design and manufactuing services to over 1,250 organizations across the United States and has performed over 3,200 process sequences for a wide variety of applications including: consumer electronics, industrial products, medical devices, defense industries, oil and gas exploration, environment sensing, earthquake sensing, and others.  Most MNX customers are commerical organizations ranging from Forture 500 corporations to start-ups, but the MNX also provide implementation services to leading academic institutions, Federal Labs, and others.

Dr. Huff previously was on the faculty in the Elecrtical Engineering and Applied Physics department at Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) where he worked on a number of high-profile R&D efforts including the development of the first chip-based insulin micropump that recieved national attention including the front page article in the LA Times, Cleveland Dispatch, and was featured in a book entitled "One Digital Day" by Rick Solomon.

He also served as the Executive Director of the Microfabrication facility at CWRU that was a state-of-the-art semiconductor R&D center used by CWRU staff and students, academic institutions, and commerical companies.  

Previously, Dr. Huff was a Fellow at Baxter Healthcare Coporation where he managed an R&D and product development orgnization and participated in the development of a number of products sold in medical device markets.  He also performed technical due diligence on companies that Baxter was interested in acquiring.

Dr. Huff also served as a principal design engineer at Raytheon Corporation where he developed the radar front-end components and systems for the Patriot Missile system.  

Dr. Huff has authored and co-authored a number of peer-reviewed papers and conference papers and has authored or co-authored 12 books on semiconductor manufacturing with the latest volume entitiled: "Process Vairations in Microsystems Manufacturing," published by Springer/Nature in 2020.

He has served on several technical commitees for conferences, DoD workshops, the Founding Chair of the SEMI semiconductor trade association working group dedicated to development of MEMS standards, and a Founding Co-Chair on the ASTM working group on semiconductor standards.

He holds over 40 issued US patents and has another dozen patents pending in semiconductor technologies including device design and manufactuing processes.

Dr. Huff has a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) from MIT, a S.M.in EECS from MIT, a S.M. in Material Science and Engineering from MIT, and a B.S. (highest honors) from GA Tech.