Tingye Li was born on July 7, 1931 in
Nanjing,
Jiangsu Province, the eldest son of a diplomat. His father was a senior officer of the Chinese Foreign Ministry (before 1949, the
Republic of China) and served as an ambassador to several countries. At the age of 12, Li and his family left China to join his father in Canada. Later they lived in South Africa before eventually settling in the United States. Tingye obtained his bachelor's degree from the School of Electrical and Information Engineering at the
University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, and his Ph.D. from
Northwestern University. After graduating in 1957, he began working at
Bell Telephone Laboratories (later AT&T Bell Laboratories), working there for 41 years until his retirement from
AT&T Labs in 1998. During his tenure at AT&T, he wrote and contributed to many journal papers, patents, and books in the areas of
antennas, microwave propagation,
lasers and
optical communications. In 1961, Li and his colleague
A. Gardner Fox published a paper titled
Resonant modes in a maser interferometer, which showed that "
a laser beam bouncing back and forth between a pair of mirrors can resonate for a number of modes of energy distribution and for each of these traverse modes there is a different characteristic phase velocity and attenuation per transit." They used
computer simulation techniques to obtain their data. This work was the first to point out that an open-sided resonator containing a laser medium should have unique modes of propagation, which is fundamental to the theory and practice of lasers. This work is now considered a classic and has been cited over 595 times (
SCI) since its publication in 1961 until 1979 when Mr. Fox recalled and gave some remarks on their work. The work has been cited over 2000 times (
Google Scholar) till Oct. 2024. From the late 1960s, Li engaged in pioneering research on lightwave technologies and systems, which are now ubiquitously deployed in the
telecommunications industry. In the late 1980s, when the whole world's attention on
optical communication was still focused on a single-channel high-speed solution, he and his team developed the world's first (sparse channel)
wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) system at
AT&T Bell Labs. With the understanding that a technique can only be put into real use if it remains backward compatible with existing technology, he and his team proposed and studied the use of
optical amplifiers in WDM systems, which utilized the existing embedded base to create virtual fibers by putting more channels onto a single fiber. Their experiment in 1992 at
Roaring Creek turned out to be a "roaring success" as Li claimed in an interview, allowing 2.5 Gbit/s transmission per channel, the highest rate available at the time. The use of optical amplifiers changed the paradigm of
network economics and is considered to be of revolutionary significance (though evolutionary in design) in the history of lightwave communications. Li was active in a number of academic societies. He was the initiator of many conferences in optical communication and has often been invited to give plenary speeches. Because of his outstanding contribution and spirit of service, he was elected the President of the
Optical Society of America (OSA) in 1995. He was also a member of the
National Academy of Engineering, the
Academia Sinica (Taiwan) and the
Chinese Academy of Engineering. ==Chinese heritage==