By David
Murphy
KAUST Professor of Materials
Science and Engineering Husam N. Alshareef has
been elected as a Fellow of the National
Academy of Inventors (NAI). Professor Alshareef will be officially
inducted during the Fellows Induction Ceremony on June 27, 2023, during
the NAI 12th Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.
The NAI Fellow designation is the
most prestigious professional distinction for academic inventors. Currently,
1,567 Fellows worldwide are associated with the program representing more than
300 prestigious universities and governmental and nonprofit research
institutes.
Established in 2010, the NAI
Fellows Program honors and selects academic inventors as fellows based on the
number and significance of their patents.
According to the NAI Fellows
Selection Committee, Alshareef was chosen for induction “hav[ing] demonstrated
a highly prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding
inventions that have made a tangible impact on the quality of life, economic
development and welfare of society.”
Of his election, he said, “I am
very proud to receive this honor as a KAUST faculty member. It is truly
gratifying to receive such international recognition for the inventions that I
have made throughout my career, several of which entered volume production at
U.S. semiconductor chip makers like Micron Technology and Texas Instruments.”
A career of leading
scientific contributions
Alshareef is the principal
investigator of the KAUST Functional
Nanomaterials & Devices Laboratory, with a research focus on
developing nanoscale materials for electronics and energy applications. His
group is engaged in synthesizing advanced nanomaterials and, increasingly,
their relevant practical applications in the Kingdom.
“In the past few years, my group
has significantly impacted KAUST’s academic rankings, which was essential for
the University to prove its academic excellence. It is now my goal to replicate
this success going forward, focusing on the Kingdom’s practical
needs.”
Alshareef is the author of nearly
520 journal and conference publications and 80 issued patents. Earlier this
year, he was recognized for the fourth consecutive year by the Web of Science and Clarivate Analytics as
a highly cited researcher in material science, placing him in the top 1% of
worldwide researchers in terms of research output. He was also elected as
a Fellow of the UK Institute of Physics.
In recent years, the highly
respected researcher has received a series of notable accolades.
Alshareef’s scientific
contributions to energy storage won him the Kuwait Prize in 2018. That same year, he was also
named a Fellow of the Royal
Society of Chemistry.
In 2019, he was elected as
a Fellow of the American Physical Society for,
according to an APS statement, “contributions to the development of semiconductor
materials and processes for electronics and energy applications, including
deployment in volume production.”