Charles B. Duke
Dr.
Charles B. Duke is Vice President and Senior Research Fellow in the
Xerox Innovation Group. Prior to holding this position, he was Deputy
Director and Chief Scientist of the Pacific Northwest Division of
the Battelle Memorial Institute and Affiliate Professor of Physics
at the University of Washington.
From 1972 to 1988 he held various technical and management positions
at the Xerox Research Laboratories in Webster, NY and was an Adjunct
Professor of Physics at the University of Rochester. During 1969-72,
he was a Professor of Physics and member of the Materials Research
Laboratory and Coordinated Science Laboratory at the University of
Illinois in Urbana, IL, following six years as a staff member of
the General Electric Corporate Research and Development Center in
Schenectady, NY.
He received his Ph.D. in physics from Princeton University in 1963
following a B.S. Summa cum Laude with distinction in mathematics
from Duke University in 1959.
He is a Fellow and an Honorary Member of the American Vacuum Society,
a Fellow of the American Physical Society, a Fellow of the IEEE,
a member of the Materials Research Society and a life member of Sigma
Xi.
In 1977, Dr. Duke received the Medard W. Welch Award in Vacuum
Science and Technology. He served as president of the American Vacuum
Society in 1979, on its Board of Directors for seven years, and as
a Trustee during 2003. In 1981 he was named one of the ISI 1000 internationally
most cited scientists. During 1985-86 he served as founding editor-in-chief
of the Journal of Materials Research and from 1992-2001
he was editor-in-chief of Surface Science and Surface Science
Letters. He served on the council of the Materials Research
Society for seven years, serving as Treasurer during 1991-2. In 1993
he was elected to the National Academy of Engineering and in 2001
to the National Academy of Sciences. During 1995-9 he served on the
Council and Executive Board of the American Physical Society. From
1997-2000 he served as general chairman of the Physical Electronics
Conference. He served on the Governing Board of the American Institute
of Physics for eleven years and continues to serve on its Corporate
Associates Advisory Committee.
He has written over 350 papers on surface science, materials research,
semiconductor physics, and the electronic structure of molecular
solids, several patents on the use of feedback in the design of digital
imaging and printing systems, a monograph on electron tunneling in
solids, and has edited three books Surface Science: The First
Thirty Years (1994), Color Systems Integration (1998),
and Frontiers in Surface and Interface Science (2002).
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