ECE Faculty Candidate Colloquium

 

Friday                                     **Special Location & Time**
March 7
11:00 - 11:50 AM 
Kelley 1007

 

Harish Krishnaswamy 
EECS Colloquium: ECE Faculty Candidate
Doctoral Candidate
University of Southern California

 

RF and mm-Wave Phased Arrays: Techniques for Silicon Integration

The integration of millimeter-wave systems in silicon-based technologies has 
generated tremendous interest in academia and industry over the last five 
years. However, the efforts thus far have focused on the direct application of 
conventional microwave design techniques to silicon. Relying heavily on modular 
design, apriori measurement of the individual active and passive devices, and 
simple circuit topologies, this approach misses the fundamental point of 
silicon integration. Silicon-based technologies, particularly CMOS, allow the 
designer to reliably integrate millions of transistors onto a single chip. This 
paves the way for innovative compact and power-efficient architectures that 
exploit multi-functional circuits, nonlinear phenomena and "free" calibration 
circuitry. 

This talk will present architectures and implementations along these lines that 
attempt to truly harness the power of silicon at RF and mm-wave frequencies. 
The emphasis will be on an integrated phased-array-transceiver architecture 
that exploits a nonlinear injection-pulling phenomenon and eliminates key 
building blocks, such as mixers, power splitters and phase shifters. 
Theoretical formulations for performance metrics, such as sensitivity, 
linearity and mismatch tolerance, will be presented. The talk will also include 
results from fully-integrated 4-channel phased-array prototypes implemented in 
0.13μm CMOS and operating in the 22-29GHz frequency band. These prototypes 
exhibit state-of-the-art performance at a fraction of the area and power 
consumptions of conventional designs. 

Biography:

Harish Krishnaswamy received the B.Tech. degree in Electrical Engineering from 
the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras, India, in 2001, and the M.S. degree 
in Electrical Engineering from the University of Southern California (USC) in 
2003. He is currently a doctoral candidate at USC. 

His research interests include high-quality integrated passive elements, 
high-frequency oscillators and integrated RF and mm-wave phased-array 
transceivers. In the summers of 2006 and 2007, he held internship positions at 
Sierra Monolithics, Inc. and the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center respectively, 
and worked on mm-wave building blocks for wireless transceivers. 

He received the IEEE International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) 
Lewis Winner Award for Outstanding Paper in 2007. 

 

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