Chang Chun-yen


Chang Chun-yen was a Taiwanese electrical engineer and professor who served as President of National Chiao Tung University. He was a member of Academia Sinica and a foreign associate of the United States National Academy of Engineering. Considered a founder of Taiwan's semiconductor industry, he was awarded the TWAS Prize for Engineering Sciences in 2006 and the Nikkei Asia Prize for Science in 2007.

Early life and education

Chang was born on 12 October 1937 in Fengshan, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. His father Chang Mu-huo, a secondary school teacher, was fired after the February 28 incident and sentenced to death on charge of subversion for his involvement in the Madou incident.
Because of his father's involvement, Chang was blacklisted and forbidden from going abroad to study, and therefore received his entire education in Taiwan. After graduating with an electrical engineering degree from National Cheng Kung University in 1960, he studied at the graduate school of National Chiao Tung University, where he earned his MS in 1962 and his PhD in 1970, specializing in semiconductors. He was the first locally educated engineering PhD in Taiwan.

Career

In 1964, Chang, together with his colleagues Chang Jui-fu and Kuo Shuang-fa, founded the Semiconductor Research Center at NCTU, which was the first such center in Taiwan and considered the foundation of Taiwan's hi-tech industry.
He moved to National Cheng Kung University in 1977, where he pioneered Taiwan's research on semiconductor materials including gallium arsenide, amorphous silicon, and polycrystalline silicon. After 10 years at NCKU, he returned to NCTU in 1987 and established the National Nano Device Laboratories in 1990, serving as its director until 1997. He then served as director of NCTU's Microelectronics and Information System Research Center for a year.
On 1 August 1998, Chang became President of National Chiao Tung University. In 2002, he established the program "National System on Chip" to foster talent in system design.
Chang's former students went on to establish some of the largest hi-tech companies in Taiwan, including Acer, Taiwan Semiconductor, and UMC. Chang served as an advisor to some of Taiwan's semiconductor companies. He donated more than NT$100 million from his earnings to the endowment of NCTU.

Awards

Chang was elected as an IEEE Fellow in 1987 "for his contribution to semiconductor device development and to education". He became a member of Academia Sinica in 1996, and a foreign associate of the United States National Academy of Engineering in 2000.
Chang was awarded IEEE's Third Millennium Medal in 2000, the TWAS Prize for Engineering Sciences in 2006 "for his pioneering contributions to very large scale integration, opto-electronics, microwave devices and materials", and the Nikkei Asia Prize for Science in 2007.

Illness and death

Chang was diagnosed with cancer in 2016. After two years of treatment, he died on 12 October 2018, his 81st birthday.

Selected publications

A selection of Chang's articles published in scientific journals and conferences: