***The seminar has been moved back to KEC 1005 Seminar Room ***

Seminar: ECE Faculty Candidate

Wednesday
February 22nd
11:00am - 11:50am
Kelley 1005 (Seminar Room)

Pavan Kumar Hanumolu
PhD. Candidate
School of EECS
Oregon State University


Performance Enhancement Techniques for Signaling Systems

In order for the aggressive scaling of transistors to truly benefit the
performance of large and complex digital systems, the communication
bandwidth between ICs must scale accordingly. However, interconnect
technology does not scale as aggressively, making communication between
chips the major bottleneck in overall system performance. In addition,
supply voltage scaling, increasing device leakage, and increased noise
make existing signaling circuits inefficient and difficult to scale.

This talk will present both analog and digital enhancement techniques to
mitigate scaling related issues and improve the performance of building
blocks used in high-speed signaling systems. A hybrid analog/digital
clock and data recovery (CDR) architecture that improves the tracking
range of
traditional CDRs by an order of magnitude will be presented. This CDR
also employs improved analog phase-locked loop architecture to
circumvent
fundamental scaling problems such as low voltages and reduced output
impedances.

An all-digital CDR architecture that obviates the need for any analog
components while achieving error-free operation will be discussed.
Several digital signal processing techniques used to achieve this
performance will be presented. Finally, a digital-to-phase
converter(DPC) with a resolution that exceeds the state-of-the-art DPC
resolution by an order of magnitude will be reported. The proposed DPC
achieves better than 100 femto-second resolution. Measurement results
obtained from prototype chips that validate the proposed design
techniques will be summarized.

Bio.

Pavan Kumar Hanumolu received the B.E. (Hons.) degree in electrical and
electronics engineering and the M.Sc. (Hons.) degree in Mathematics from
the Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani, India, in 1998,
and the M.S. degree in electrical and computer engineering from the
Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, MA, in 2001. He is currently
working toward the Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering at the Oregon
State University, Corvallis.

Mr. Hanumolu received Analog Devices Outstanding student designer award
in 2002 and the Intel Ph.D. fellowship in 2004. He worked at Cypress
Semiconductors and Intel research labs on various analog-mixed signal
circuits.

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