Xin Selected as 2020 da Vinci Fellow

Sept. 19, 2020
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ECE professor Hao Xin has a long history of moving research beyond the laboratory and into the commercial world. His work on high-frequency technologies has applications in areas ranging from autonomous vehicles to biomedical imaging and energy harvesting. And his research into metamaterials, which have properties not found in nature, has moved the scientific community closer to technology such as invisibility cloaks.

The College of Engineering named Xin the 2020 da Vinci Fellow for his dedication to advancing academic programs and research in the college over the past 15 years. Da Vinci Fellows receive a one-time grant of $10,000 to support their work. Xin said the award is particularly meaningful because it comes from his home institution and is named for one of the most famous inventors of all time. Da Vinci’s dreams were far ahead of his time. His notebooks contain drawings of machines that look like modern helicopters and tanks, for example.

“Da Vinci is a person every inventor looks up to, and I love inventing things,” said Xin, who has more than 20 patents and leads the Millimeter Wave Circuits and Antennas Laboratory. “I want to invent things that actually help people, and da Vinci is inspiring. Sometimes things like flying cars seem impossible, or sound crazy. But it’s probably going to become a reality in less than 50 years – and less than 500 years from when da Vinci was alive.”

Xin is a fellow of and fills several roles in IEEE, an international professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity. He is associate editor for the organization’s Antenna and Wireless Propagation Magazine and the Journal of Radio Frequency Identification. He also serves as the chair of the Young Professionals Committee of the Antennas and Propagation Society and chair of Tucson’s joint chapter of the Microwave Theory and Techniques Society and Antennas and Propagation Society.

“Whether he is patenting an invention, establishing a startup, or bridging the worlds of academia and industry, Hao has been highly successful moving research beyond the laboratory to widely beneficial commercial applications," said David W. Hahn, Craig M. Berge Dean of the College of Engineering. "This, along with his dedication to his students, makes him a fantastic choice for the college’s 2020 da Vinci Fellow.”

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