Harry Veendrick graduated from the Technical University Eindhoven, the Netherlands, in 1977. In the same year he joined Philips Research Laboratories, also in Eindhoven, where he has been involved in the design of memories, gate arrays and complex digital video-signal processors. He holds 25 US and many more European patents in the area of CMOS circuit design, with several other patents pending, and he is the (co-)author of more than 30 publications on robust, high-performance and low-power CMOS IC design. In this respect, he has contributed to many conferences and conference workshops, as reviewer, speaker, invited speaker, panellist, organizer, guest editor and program committee member. In addition, he is the author of MOS ICs (VCH 1992), Deep-Submicron CMOS ICs, from Basics to ASICs (Kluwer Academic Publishers: 1-st edition 1998, 2-nd edition 2000) and Nanometer CMOS ICs, from Basics to ASICs (Springer: 1-st edition June 2008). He is a co-author of Low-Power Electronics Design (CRC Press, 2004).

His principle research interests included the design of low-power and high-speed complex digital CMOS circuits, with an emphasis on nanometer-scale physical effects and scaling aspects. From 2002 to 2009 he has been project leader of the Deep-Submicron/Nanometer CMOS Electrical Design Cluster within the research group Mixed-Signal Circuits and Systems at NXP Research, which is the 2006 spin-off of the disentangled former Philips Semiconductors Product and R&D Departments. Complementary to this is his interest in IC technology, which allows him to act as an interface between digital IC design and IC process technology.

From 1980 onwards, next to his research activities, he has been actively involved in the training of more than 3000 semiconductor design, test, product, CAD tools and process engineers.

In 2002 he received the PhD degree in electronic engineering from the Technical University of Eindhoven, The Netherlands. He was a Research Fellow at Philips Research Laboratories and NXP Research and has been a Visiting Professor to the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering of the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, UK.

In May 2009 he has left NXP Research and started his own training activity teaching 3-days’ and 5-days’ courses for different target audiences (NanoCMOS-Training BV).

Complementary to that he has finished the new book ‘Bits on Chips’ that includes both an introduction to microelectronics for the less technical people (PART1), as well is a complete overview of all semiconductor disciplines (PART2),  for every semiconductor professional engineer: physics, design, lithography, process, fabrication, testing, failure analysis and packaging.

Honours
  • 2015’s High-Tech Institute’s “Best Trainer Award”
  • It was one of the most popular courses over the lifetime of Philips
  • Today more than 4200 course participants!