Monday
April 21
4:00 - 4:50 PM 
Kelley 1001

 

Patrick Chiang 
Assistant Professor
School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science
Oregon State University

Oregon State VLSI Research Group Overview 

The VLSI Research Group at Oregon State University, started 1.5 years
ago, is pursuing several interesting projects at the intersection of
computer architecture, digital/analog circuit design, devices, and
communications. In this talk, I will describe at a high level some of
the projects and collaborations underway in our group. Specifically: 1)
P3 (Power, Process, Parallelism); 2) NOCHI (Networks-on-a-Chip Using
Heterogeneous Interconnect); 3) Ultrawideband RF for Short-Range
Interconnect (with Professor Liu); 4) 10+ GSs, Low-Power ADCs; 5)
international collaborations with Chinese institutions. As much of this
research is still a work in progress, undergrads/grads/professors are
welcome to come participate and hopefully ask some tough questions. 

Biography:

Patrick Chiang received the B.S. degree in electrical engineering and
computer sciences from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1998,
and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering from Stanford
University in 2001 and 2007. He is currently an assistant professor of
electrical and computer engineering at Oregon State University. 

In 1998, he was with Datapath Systems (now LSI Logic), working on analog
front-ends for DSL chipsets. In 2002 he was a research intern at Velio
Communications(now Rambus) working on 10GHz clock synthesis
architectures. In 2004 he was a consultant at startup Telegent Systems,
evaluating low phase noise VCOs for CMOS mobile TV tuners. 

In 2006 he was a visiting NSF postdoctoral researcher at Tsinghua
University, China, investigating low power, low voltage RF transceivers.
In Summer 2007, he was a visiting professor at the Institute of
Computing Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, where he collaborated
on the design of multi-gigahertz ADCs and high speed serial links. 

His interests are in the design and implementation of new architectures
for mixed signal circuits in deep submicron CMOS, focusing specifically
on low power consumption and process compensation techniques. 

 

_______________________________________________
Colloquium mailing list
[email protected]
https://secure.engr.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/colloquium

Reply via email to