Speaker: Prof. David J. Allstot, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, University of Washington, USA
Time:
10:00-11:30am, Sept.20th (Tuesday)
Place: Room 105,
Microelectronics Building
Abstract:
The RF power amplifier dissipates a
large fraction of the total power of a transceiver because of its low
efficiency. Despite more than two decades of intensive research, the challenge
of on-chip RF PAs with high efficiency in digital-friendly CMOS technologies
has not been met. A new paradigm—the switched-capacitor RF power
amplifier—which meets many of the remaining challenges is described.
Body-area-networks (BAN) that integrate
multiple sensor nodes in portable and wearable bio-medical systems are
revolutionizing healthcare. A typical BAN comprises several bio-signal and
motion sensors and uses ultra-low-power short-haul radios in conjunction with
nearby smart-phones or handheld devices (with GPS capabilities) to communicate
via the internet with a doctor or other healthcare professional. Higher energy
efficiency is critical to the development of feature-rich, wearable and
reliable personal health-monitoring systems.
The second part of this talk will overview compressed sensing techniques and describe a switched-capacitor analog front-end for bio-signal acquisition.
Biography:
David J. Allstot received the B.S. from
the Univ. of Portland, the M.S. from Oregon State Univ. and the Ph.D. from the
Univ. of California, Berkeley. He has held several industrial and academic
positions and has been the Boeing-Egtvedt Chair Professor of Engineering at the
Univ. of Washington since 1999. He was Chair of the Dept. of Electrical
Engineering from 2004 to 2007. Dr. Allstot has advised approximately 100 M.S.
and Ph.D. graduates, published about 300 papers, and received several awards.
He has also been active in service to IEEE and became the IEEE Fellow in 1992.