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Paul Suni

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Name
  
Paul Suni


Paul Suni

Paul Suni (born 1956) is a Silicon Valley technologist, engineer, semiconductor device physicist and independent researcher. Since 1984, he has contributed to advancements in semiconductor electronics, photonics, digital imaging sensors and medical devices. In 2007, he dedicated himself to research concerning the scientific and philosophical foundations of technology and wellbeing.

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Paul Suni Paul Suni Lockheed Martin Corporation Bethesda on ResearchGate

Chronology

Suni was born in Helsinki, Finland. He studied at the University of California at Berkeley (Experimental Quantum Physics); Stanford University (Semiconductor Device Physics); the Institute for Theoretical Physics at University of Helsinki (Theoretical Physics) and Helsinki Conservatory of Music (Classical Piano and Music Theory). He earned his physics degree from U.C. Berkeley in 1983 and has lived in Silicon Valley since then.

Suni joined Fairchild Semiconductor in 1984 where he specialized in image sensor technology and worked as an R&D group leader. Committed to creative independence, he developed a broad set of expertise that grew out of his work in semiconductor device physics, image sensor design and technology integration. In 1992, he joined Orbit Semiconductor to start up Orbit's image sensor technology group, which he spun off as Suni Imaging Microsystems in 1995 and which he later repositioned as Suni Medical Imaging, Inc. In order to pursue his long-standing intellectual avocation of integration concerning foundations of science, he retired from Suni Medical Imaging as CEO and Chief Technology Officer in 2007, after the company was acquired by German private equity firm Forstgarten Holdings. [1]-[3]

Contributions to dental digital radiography

Suni is known as The Father of Digital Radiography for his invention of, and subsequent development of the world's first film-sized diagnostic quality intra-oral digital radiography sensors under contract with Sirona Dental Systems, formerly Schick Technologies, in 1992-93. By 2004, he had contributed technologies for the launching of more than half of dental digital radiography brands in the world including the Dr. Suni digital radiography system introduced by Suni Medical Imaging in 2003. Digital radiography eliminates x-ray film and associated toxic chemicals in dentistry by employing a re-usable semiconductor imaging device to capture x-rays. Digital Radiography significantly improves diagnostics, economics and workflow in dental practice. By eliminating the need for x-ray film, toxic chemicals, and reducing x-ray dose exposure requirements, the adoption of digital radiography improves both patient and environmental health and safety. [4],[6]

Other scientific contributions

Other scientific and medical applications for which Suni and his Silicon Valley teams developed enabling technologies include Digital Mammography; CMOS-CCD System-on-a-Chip (SoC) technology; Wafer-scale Integration (WSI); CCD Astronomy in visible and x-ray spectra; CEREC dental robotics; Optical Processing; ICP Optical Emission Spectroscopy and High-Speed DVD/ CD-ROM technology. Known for his preference for industrial trade secrecy, he generated a limited number of patents and confined his publishing activities to invited technical articles, scientific papers and conference keynote speeches. Several of his innovations have been featured on the front covers of leading professional periodicals. [5]-[20]

Suni's academic collaborations include research and development of scientific image sensors performed under the auspices of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University, University of California at Santa Cruz and Louisiana State University.

Suni and his teams also engaged in U.S. Government sponsored research, claiming to have received several million dollars in research grants from the National Cancer Institute (digital mammography), National Institute for Dental Research (intraoral radiography) and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) (optical processing). [21]-[22]

References

Paul Suni Wikipedia