Monday
October 4
4:00 - 5:00 PM 
Kelley 1001

Hermann Schumacher 
Professor
Institute of Electron Devices and Circuits
University of Ulm


Impulse Radio UWB Circuits and Systems for Medical Applications

When the US Federal Communications Commission opened up a frequency band from 
3.1 to 10.6 GHz for unlicensed use with low spectral power density, it 
triggered a flurry of academic and industrial activity. For several years, most 
of the activities concentrated on wideband OFDM systems intended for 
ultra-highspeed wireless LAN applications. With the demise of the WiMedia 
consortium in 2009, attention refocused on impulse radio techniques, which have 
been shown to be an ideal candidate for high precision location, movement 
detection, and also low-power sensor node networks. Impulse radio UWB systems 
are well suited for applications in a biomedical context, such as vital sign 
detection or catheter tracking. The Ulm University group has been actively 
researching impulse radio circuits since 2004. The presentation will introduce 
their highly compact transmitter designs, as well as both correlation and 
energy detection receiver concepts, along with results of biomedical validation 
experiments.


Biography

Hermann Schumacher was born in Siegen, Germany, in 1957. He received his 
Diplom‐Ingenieur and Doktor‐Ingenieur degrees in Electrical Engineering from 
RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany in 1982 and 1986, respectively. In 1986, Dr. 
Schumacher joined Bell Communications Research (Bellcore), in Red Bank, NJ, as 
a member of technical staff, working on InP‐based optoelectronic and electronic 
devices. In 1990, he accepted a position at the University of Ulm as a 
professor in the Department of Electron Devices and Circuits. Here, his group 
works on Silicon and III‐V based heterostructure semiconductor devices and 
their applications in micro‐ and millimeter‐wave ICs. He was a visiting scholar 
at University of Wales in 1991, Bellcore in 1996, and Oregon State University 
in 1997. Since 1998, he has been the director of the Communications Technology 
International Master Program at the University of Ulm and received the State 
Teaching Award 1999 for his efforts in international education. From 2000 to 
2003, he served as the University of Ulmʹs Vice President for Research, and 
served as a member of the Academic Senate from 2006 to 2010. Professor 
Schumacher was the co‐chair of the 2007 European Microwave IC conference (EUMIC 
2007), chaired the RF Microsystems Cluster Meeting, the European Commissionʹs 
annual joint evaluation event for projects related to high‐frequency 
microsystems, in 2006 and 2008. and served as Technical Program Committee Chair 
for SiRF 2010 (New Orleans, LA).


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