Biography:
Dr. Vikram J. Kapoor is a Courtesy Professor in the School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida. A nationally recognized specialist in microelectronics, Prof. Kapoor holds M.S. (1972) and Ph.D. (1976) degrees from Lehigh University, Pennsylvania, where he was awarded the Eastman Kodak prize for excellence in teaching. He went to work in California's Silicon Valley at Fairchild Corp. as a senior design engineer designing computer chips during the cutting edge of the computer revolution.
After his industrial experience, Dr. Kapoor joined Case Western Reserve University in 1978 as an Assistant Professor and taught electrical engineering and pioneered collaboration in space communications with NASA-Lewis Research Center. He joined the University of Cincinnati in 1983 as Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, and in 1986 became the head of the Electrical and Computer Engineering department. He joined the University of Toledo in 1994 as Dean of the College of Engineering, became the University President in January 1999 and then joined the rank of faculty as Professor of Bioengineering and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Director of Biomedical Nanotechnology Research Laboratory from June 2000 until June 2008. He is also Professor and Dean Emeritus, College of Engineering at the University of Toledo, Ohio since July 2008.
He was awarded the “IEEE Third Millennium Medal” in 1999 for his contribution to the Electrical Engineering profession. For his outstanding scientific and technical contributions in semiconductor microelectronics, he was elected a Fellow of the Electrochemical Society in 1993 and was awarded "Thomas D. Callinan Award" in 1991 for outstanding contributions and achievements in dielectric science and technology.
Dr. Kapoor has published over 170 scientific papers in prestigious journals and scientific conference publications. He has been a major advisor for 40 M.S. and Ph.D. student theses/dissertations and directed 38 undergraduate students' projects/theses with multimillion dollar research grants from federal/state government and industry. His students have become faculty at U.S.A. universities or have responsible positions at major high-technology companies. The overall research funding of Prof. Kapoor has been approximately 300K per year (1978-2008) in addition to teaching undergraduate and graduate courses. His overall student course evaluation ratings have been from excellent to very good teacher.