Summary
Mohammad Zaman is a postdoctoral researcher in Electrical Engineering at Stanford Universityโs Ginzton Lab, specializing in lab-on-a-chip systems, nanophotonics, computational electromagnetics, and numerical optimization. He holds a PhD from Stanford and earned top-of-class BS/MS degrees from BUET, where he also served as teaching faculty and developed strong hands-on expertise in antenna design, FDTD and optimization algorithms. His Stanford work centers on integrating near-field optical trapping and dielectrophoresis into microfluidic nanoparticle-manipulation platforms, bridging theory, simulation, and fabrication. He has substantial teaching experience in photonics and imaging labs, having designed experiments and led coursework at both Stanford and BUET. Known for combining rigorous numerical methods (PSO, DE, GA) with practical optics and microfluidics, he brings a rare mix of computational depth and experimental craftsmanship. Based in Palo Alto, he leverages an eight-year research trajectory to translate advanced electromagnetic theory into deployable lab-scale devices.
7 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Science - MS, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, CGPA: 4.00/4.00, Master of Science - MS, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, CGPA: 4.00/4.00 at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology
PhD, Electrical Engineering, PhD, Electrical Engineering at Stanford University
Bengali, English