"Coffee & Chips" is an informal lecture series exploring semiconductor and sensor technology in Europe. On March 13, we will hear a talk from SINTEF researcher Marius Mæhlum Halvorsen.
From deep underground at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider to satellites operating far above Earth, and from medical imaging systems to emerging quantum technologies, silicon radiation sensors are essential in a wide range of applications.
These semiconductor sensors come in sizes ranging from tiny chips to large assemblies spanning more than a hundred square meters. What they all share is their ability to interact with radiation and convert it into a readable electrical signal. The types of radiation they can detect include photons of different wavelengths, charged particles, and even neutrons.
SINTEF has developed and produced silicon radiation sensor technologies for almost six decades and continues to push the state of the art in custom sensor technologies and develop new applications.
In this breakfast seminar, we will explain how silicon radiation sensors are built and operate, and share insights into SINTEF’s core technologies and key areas of R&D.
Talk by Marius Mæhlum Halvorsen, Research Scientist at SINTEF Digital.
Hosted by CC-NorChip / SINTEF, University of Oslo and Forskningsparken.
Anna Stray Rongve, Marketing Manager, sensiBel
Philipp Häfliger, Professor at the University of Oslo, Research Group for Nanoelectronic systems
Thomas Ramberg, Dory and Tobias Dahl, SINTEF
Linn Fagerberg, managing director at Electronic Coast in Horten
Vegard Standeren Olsen og Ralph Bernstein, CC-NorChip
Ingelin Clausen, CEO InVivo Binonics
Lasse Irvam og Preben Storås, grunnleggere Optronics Technology
Elizaveta Vereshchagina, seniorforsker ved SINTEF, BreathSense
Henrik Hovde Sønsteby, førsteamanuensis ved UiO, CONCEPT
The competence center CC-NorChip will, over the next four years, offer free support to small and medium-sized enterprises to lower the threshold for adopting advanced technology. The goal is to raise competence and competitiveness in Norway and Europe by strengthening Norwegian companies’ ability to utilize advanced technologies and capacities both nationally and internationally.
CC-NorChip is a collaboration between SINTEF, NTNU, the University of Oslo (UiO), the University of South-Eastern Norway (USN), the University of Tromsø (UiT), and Electronic Coast, with support from, among others, the EU and the Research Council of Norway.
CC-NorChip | Sikrer Norges posisjon innen avansert teknologi
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