Summary
Yi-te Huang is a tenured research scientist with six years of experience developing novel materials and microdevices at the intersection of semiconductors and spintronics. He has deep hands-on expertise in graphene, carbon black, polymers, magnetic materials, film deposition, sputter system repair, and standard MEMS microfabrication processes. Yi-te has led independent efforts in magnetostriction and spintronics device development and has written bilingual equipment manuals for tools such as ULVAC sputter systems and vibrating-sample magnetometers. His career spans research fellowships and scientific roles at Tohoku University and a postdoctoral position at NCKU’s Center for Quantum Frontiers, now transitioning to AIST. Trilingual in Mandarin, English, and Japanese, he blends practical lab engineering with academic rigor from a mechanical engineering doctorate. He is particularly adept at translating complex materials science problems into reproducible fabrication workflows that accelerate device prototyping.
6 years of coding experience
3 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor's Degree Mechanical Engineering, Doctor's Degree Mechanical Engineering at Tohoku University