massachusetts institute of technology

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Experts for: Manufacturing

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Suzanne Berger

Raphael Dorman and Helen Starbuck Professor of Political Science; director, MIT International Science and Technologies Initiative
areas of expertise: globalization, industrial change, french politics, international education and exchange
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Jung-Hoon Chun

Director of the Laboratory for Manufacturing and Productivity and Professor of Mechanical Engineering
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Jung-Hoon Chun is director of the Laboratory for Manufacturing and Productivity and a professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He has been a member of the MIT Mechanical Engineering faculty since 1989, and has over 100 publications and patents to his credit. His research focuses on the development of Innovative Manufacturing Processes. His research areas include droplet-based manufacturing processes, microelectronics manufacturing processes such as chemical-mechanical polishing and polymer-based microfluidic devices manufacturing. One of his patented manufacturing process, the uniform-droplet spray process, has been commercialized worldwide for the production of solder spheres used in electronics packaging. His teaching focuses on these research areas and on management in engineering.  Dr. Chun also has experience in many large-scale international collaborations and industry-MIT consortia.  He is active in advising and consulting for many for-profit and non-profit organizations worldwide, in technical as well as policy areas.  Dr. Chun received a B.S. from Seoul National University, an M.A.Sc. from the University of Ottawa, and a Ph.D. from MIT, all in mechanical engineering.

Charles L. Cooney

Robert T. Hadan Professor of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering; co-director, Program on the Pharmaceutical Industry; faculty director, Deshpande Center for Technological Innovation
areas of expertise: biotech and pharmaceutical process development and manufacturing, technological innovation and entrepreneurship, biomass and biofuels
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Charles L. CooneyCharles L. Cooney received his BS in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania in 1966, and his SM (1967) and PhD (1970) in biochemical engineering from MIT. After a short postdoc stint at the Squibb Institute for Medical Research, he joined the MIT faculty as an assistant professor in 1970, becoming full professor in 1982.

Cooney’s honors include the 1989 Gold Medal of the Institute of Biotechnological Studies (London); the Food, Pharmaceutical and Bioengineering Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers; the James Van Lanen Distinguished Service Award from the American Chemical Society’s Division of Microbial and Biochemical Technology; and election to the American Institute of Medical and Biochemical Engineers and the Fellows of the American Chemical Society.

A consultant to multiple biotech and pharmaceutical companies, Cooney sits on the boards of Genzyme, Polypore International and Biocon Ltd. (India). His research and teaching span many aspects of biochemical engineering and pharmaceutical manufacturing. He holds more than 30 patents, has published 250-plus research papers, and has co-authored or edited five books, including Development of Sustainable Bioprocesses: Modeling and Assessment (Wiley Press, 2006).

Olivier de Weck

Associate Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems, Associate Head, Engineering Systems Division ESD
areas of expertise: space exploration logistics, systems engineering
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systems engineering

Olivier (“Oli”) de Weck is a professor of Engineering at MIT and holds degrees in industrial engineering from ETH Zurich (1993) in Switzerland and aerospace systems engineering from MIT (1999,2001). Before joining MIT he was a liaison engineer and later engineering program manager on the Swiss F/A-18 fighter aircraft program at McDonnell Douglas (1993-1997).

His research interests, teaching emphasis and professional experience is mainly in two areas: Systems Engineering for Changeability and Commonality — referred to as “Strategic Engineering” — and Space Exploration Logistics.

Prof. de Weck is an Associate Fellow of AIAA, winner of the 2007 Best Paper Award for the journal Systems Engineering, the 2006 Frank E. Perkins award for excellence in graduate advising and recipient of the 2007 AIAA MDO TC outstanding service award. He won two best paper awards at the 2004 INCOSE Systems Engineering Conference, held the Robert Noyce Career Development Professorship from 2002-2005, and co-advised the best MIT System Design and Management thesis in 2005. He has published over 150 papers in the area of systems engineering and space systems design for exploration and communications. His research has been funded by GM, NASA, BP, JPL, Pratt & Whitney, ArvinMeritor, DARPA, AFRL and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Prof. de Weck serves as Associate Editor for the AIAA Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets (JSR) and Chair of the AIAA Space Logistics Technical Committee. Since July 2008 he serves as associate department head for MIT’s Engineering Systems Division (ESD). ESD studies complex socio-technical systems and currently has 52 faculty members and research staff and 440 graduate students.

Kimberly Hamad-Schifferli

Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Biological Engineering
areas of expertise: nanobiotechnology, nanoparticles, nanoscale interface to biology
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Kimberly Hamad-SchifferliKimberly Hamad-Schifferli is assistant professor of biological engineering and mechanical engineering. Hamad-Schifferli's research includes the use of nanoparticles to manipulate biomolecules and biological processes, the biophysical effects of nanoparticles on proteins and DNA, and applications of nanoparticles in drug delivery and manipulating gene expression.

Paul A. Lagace

Professor, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems Division
areas of expertise: composite materials and their structures, fracture and fatigue (longevity), damage tolerance, safety of aircraft structural systems, manufacturing technology, system engineering, management issues
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Paul A. Lagace is a professor of aeronautics and astronautics and engineering systems at MIT, where he also received his SB, SM and PhD. He is a highly regarded international authority on the response and failure of composite structures and is recognized as a leader for the development of composite structures technology, particularly as related to the safety of aircraft structural systems.

He has more recently pursued work related to broader systems issues, particularly dealing with the use of technology and associated risk. He has frequently served as an advisor and consultant to industry and government agencies on aspects of structural technology and broader engineering systems. He has served as a consultant, expert witness and member of committees and panels in the investigation of accidents and their implications.

He is a member of several societies and national committees, a fellow of the AIAA, the ASC and the ASTM, and has served for a number of years as president of the ICCM (International Committee on Composite Materials), being recognized as a World Fellow of Composites and honorary member of the Executive Council. He is very interested in teaching and advising and has won several teaching awards, including being recognized as a MacVicar Faculty Fellow.

Jeff Lang

Professor of electrical engineering
areas of expertise: electrical engineering, electromechanics, electronics, high-performance electrical machine systems, micro-fabricated electromechanical actuators and sensors, distributed systems with an emphasis on flexible electromechanical structures
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Jeffrey H. Lang received his SB (1975), SM (1977) and PhD (1980) degrees from the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT. In 1980, he joined the faculty of MIT, where he is now a professor of electrical engineering and computer science. He served as the associate director of the MIT Laboratory for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems between 1991 and 2003, and as an associate editor of Sensors and Actuators between 1991 and 1994.

Lang's research and teaching interests focus on the analysis, design and control of electromechanical systems with an emphasis on: rotating machinery; micro-scale (MEMS) sensors, actuators and energy converters; flexible structures; and the dual use of electromechanical actuators as motion and force sensors. He has written more than 220 papers and holds 12 patents in the areas of electromechanics, MEMS, power electronics and applied control, and has been awarded four best-paper prizes from IEEE societies. He has also received two teaching awards from MIT.

He is a co-author of Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits, published by Morgan Kaufman, and the editor of and a contributor to Multi-Wafer Rotating MEMS Machines: Turbines Generators and Engines, published by Springer. Lang is a fellow of the IEEE and a former Hertz Foundation Fellow.

Daniel Roos

Professor of engineering systems
areas of expertise: technology and policy, transportation systems, industry studies, information systems, manufacturing systems and policy, international competitiveness, industrial strategy and development in the automobile industry, engineering systems, lean advancement initiative (lai), international motor vehicle program (imvp)
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Donald Rosenfield

Director, Leaders For Global Operations Program and Senior Lecturer, MIT Sloan School of Management
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Dr. Rosenfield holds a Ph.D. in Operations Research from Stanford University. He is co-author of Operations Strategy, Competing in the 21st Century and Modern Logistics Management, and has written articles for a number of journals, including Harvard Business Review, Operations Research, Management Science, and Sloan Management Review.

Dr. Rosenfield’s research focuses primarily in manufacturing strategy and supply chain management. Some specific areas of interest include the development of facility and supply chain strategies in a global environment and how location and sourcing decisions are made.

Dr. Rosenfield has served at M.I.T. since 1980 as Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, and Visiting Associate Professor. He has also served on the faculties of Harvard Business School, the State University of New York, and Boston University. At MIT he has developed courses in Manufacturing Strategy, Operations Management, and International Logistics. Prior to joining MIT, Dr. Rosenfield served on the staff of Arthur D. Little, Inc. from 1976-1988 focusing on logistics and manufacturing strategy.

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