UB - University at Buffalo
  
Electrical Engineering


 

Welcome to UB EE

Welcome to the Department of Electrical Engineering (EE) in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York.

Ours is a highly interdisciplinary department. We build on a solid foundation of physical sciences, a broad knowledge of engineering techniques, and an understanding of how technologies can help us to shape the future. Our primary mission is to educate students at all levels.

We offer the breadth of education and depth of training necessary to make our graduates successful in their professional careers. Our faculty members engage in a long-standing tradition of excellent teaching, innovative research, and valuable public service activities; our department staff is devoted to helping students succeed.

Our research programs are varied and receive long-term support from the university, the State of New York, federal agencies, and industry.

We have 460 undergraduate students and 190 graduate students, and have 21 full time faculty members.

All our faculty members participate in professional societies. They organize international meetings and provide editorial services to technical journals. Four have been elected as fellows of professional societies, including IEEE, and one adjunct faculty is a member of both the Academy of Engineering and the Academy of Sciences. Several have been featured in magazines, such as Research and Development, for their inventions.

Our department houses some of the most modern equipment for studying nanostructures and femtosecond dynamics.

Highly interdisciplinary by nature, our faculty routinely engage in cooperative ventures with other departments, industry, governmental agencies, and area hospitals. We are involved in multidisciplinary projects in such diverse areas as nanoelectronic devices, single photon detection, radar image processing, biomimetics, and DNA imaging.

We sponsor a cooperative series of seminars in electrical engineering that brings prominent experts to Buffalo from around the country to share their knowledge in diversified fields with engineers and students through tutorial sessions, lectures, and personal interactions.

We encourage you to explore our site.

 

HIGHLIGHT

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In a collaboration between a UB EE group and an interdisciplinary group, an EE graduate student has demonstrated the ability to trap 2.5um diameter polysterene microspheres in a matrix using a single scanning laser beam.

THE FACES OF EE

Bill Kirkey
Ph.D. candidate (Optics and Materials)

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PROSPECTIVE GRAD STUDENTS

Apply online to UB's Department of Electrical Engineering graduate programs.

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