I am a PhD candidate in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology advised by Professor Saibal Mukhopadhyay. My research interests include beyond-CMOS computing hardware, quantum computing, quantum-classical co-design, electron device physics, and machine learning acceleration in hardware. My current projects focus on quantum computing problems such as quantum-classical hardware co-design for applications like low-latency calibration of quantum hardware; quantum characterization, validation and verification; and quantum machine learning.
I currently work with the Quantum Performance Laboratory of Sandia National Laboratories in conjunction with my PhD research, and I am a fellow of the NDSEG Fellowship under the Air Force Research Laboratory/Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Before attending Georgia Tech, I received my Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering, Summa Cum Laude, from the University of Florida in 2019. I also have prior internship experience working at Intel Corporation and General Electric Aviation.
I have a passion for mentorship and interdisciplinary collaboration which fuels my desire to pursue research opportunities where I may advance beyond-CMOS computing research through both personal research and teaching and mentoring the next generation of researchers and engineers.
In my free time I enjoy anything outdoors from hiking, to cycling, to competing in obstacle course races. I also love music, rock climbing, and being involved with my church as a sound engineer. When I am writing in a non-technical manner, I enjoy writing poetry and a personal blog.