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Ana Inês Inácio Designs the Future of Wireless

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Why This Matters

Ana Inês Inácio's pioneering work in RF sensor systems and wireless technology is shaping the future of communication networks, with significant implications for both industry innovation and consumer connectivity. Her leadership and technical advancements exemplify how fostering inclusive professional communities can accelerate technological progress and societal impact.

Key Takeaways

When Ana Inês Inácio goes to work at the Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) in The Hague, she thinks about signals most people never notice: radio waves moving between satellites, sensors, and future wireless networks.

The integrated circuits the research scientist designs lay the foundation for next-generation RF sensor systems critical to advancing radar technologies.

Ana Inês Inácio EMPLOYER Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research, TNO TITLE Scientist IEEE MEMBER GRADE Senior member ALMA MATER University of Aveiro, in Portugal

Those invisible RF signals are only part of what earned the IEEE senior member her global recognition.

Inácio recently received the IEEE–Eta Kappa Nu Outstanding Young Professional Award for “leadership in IEEE Young Professionals, fostering innovation and inclusivity, and pioneering advancements in RF sensor systems, bridging technical excellence with impactful community engagement.”

The recognition from IEEE’s honor society reflects a career built along two parallel paths: advancing RF circuit design while helping engineers worldwide build professional communities.

“I’ve always liked building things,” Inácio says. “Sometimes that means circuits; sometimes it means helping people connect and grow together.”

That blend of technical innovation and global leadership gives her work impact far beyond the laboratory.

EE lessons at the kitchen table

Inácio grew up in Vales do Rio, a rural village near Covilhã in central Portugal.

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