Wahid Shams Kolahi Explained

Wahid Shams-Kolahi
Birth Date:May 3, 1965
Birth Place:Arak, Iran
Nationality:Iranian, German
Fields:Electrical Engineering
Electrophysics
Physics
Solid State Electronics
Photovoltaic
Semiconductor Physics
Alma Mater:Stuttgart University (Undergraduate, Electrical Engineering)
Osaka University (M. Sc., Electrical Engineering)
Osaka University (Ph.D., Electrical Engineering)
Doctoral Advisor:Yoshihiro Hamakawa
Hiroaki Okamoto
Academic Advisors:Werner H. Bloss
Manfred Pilkuhn

Wahid Shams-Kolahi (Persian: وحید شمس کلاهی) is a scientist and an electrical engineer who is known for his research in photovoltaic-related technologies.

Dr. Shams-Kolahi was born in Arak, Iran, in 1965. He obtained his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering at University of Stuttgart and joined the graduate school of electrical engineering/electrophysics, led by Professor Werner H. Bloss.[1] He worked under Professor Bloss with the Institute of Physical Electronics, IPE,[2] and later joined the Hamakawa Lab[3] of the Graduate School of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering Science, Osaka University, Japan, where he obtained his master's degree in 1994 and his Ph.D. in 1997.

While at Hamakawa Lab, Wahid Shams-Kolahi conducted research on space-made materials and their potential for applications such as the absorption layer of solar cells. The team at Hamakawa Lab led by Shams-Kolahi was chosen by the Spacelab Mission Endeavour project, a cooperation between NASA of the United States and the Japanese NASDA, to study the electrical and optical properties of SiAsTe amorphous- or chalcogenide semiconductors fabricated under microgravity in space as part of Endeavour mission STS-47.

Wahid has initiated and conducted research in solid-state electronics and the manufacture of thin-film solar cells such as amorphous silicon, CIGS and CdTe.

Notable projects

Selected publications

References

  1. http://www.ipe.uni-stuttgart.de
  2. http://www.ipe.uni-stuttgart.de/index.php?lang=eng&pulldownID=12&ebene2ID=44
  3. http://www.semi.ee.es.osaka-u.ac.jp/okamotolab/en/index.html