CIRCUIT INTUITIONS: LOOKING INTO A NODE
Circuit Intuitions is column published regularly in the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Magazine. As the title suggests, each article provides insights and intuitions into circuit design and analysis. These articles are aimed at undergraduate students but may serve the interests of other readers as well. This talk presents the first article in this series titled "Looking into a Node".
Date and Time
Location
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Registration
- Date: 07 Dec 2018
- Time: 02:00 PM to 04:00 PM
- All times are (GMT-05:00) US/Eastern
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- University of Pennsylvania
- 210 S 33rd St
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- United States 19104
- Building: Sirkanich Hall
- Room Number: 114
- Starts 02 December 2018 07:00 PM
- Ends 07 December 2018 08:00 AM
- All times are (GMT-05:00) US/Eastern
- No Admission Charge
Speakers
Dr. Ali SHEIKHOLESLAMI
CIRCUIT INTUITIONS: LOOKING INTO A NODE
Circuit Intuitions is column published regularly in the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Magazine. As the title suggests, each article provides insights and intuitions into circuit design and analysis. These articles are aimed at undergraduate students but may serve the interests of other readers as well. This talk presents the first article in this series titled "Looking into a Node".
What do you see when looking into a node of a linear time-invariant circuit? Most circuit designers simply see the Thevenin or Norton equivalent circuit of that node with respect to ground. We explore this for circuits including transistors. We limit ourselves to metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) transistors for now, but the procedure we describe is also applicable to bipolar transistors.
Biography:
Ali Sheikholeslami has been a professor at the University of Toronto, Canada, since 1999. His research interests are jitter, analog and digital integrated circuits, high-speed signaling, and memory design. He has published over 70 journal and conference articles including several on jitter. He has served as the ISSCC Education Chair since 2013, and as a member of its wireline committee from 2007 to 2013. Since 2016, he has been the Education Chair and The Distinguished Lecturer Program Chair for the Solid-State Circuits Society and an elected member of its Administration Committee. Prof. Sheikholeslami has received numerous teaching awards from the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering at the University of Toronto. He is a co-author of a book entitled Understanding Jitter and Phase Noise, published by Cambridge University Press.