DL: ULTRA-LOW POWER SENSOR INTERFACES FOR IOT - IEEE SENSORS AND SYSTEMS COUNCILS SOUTH BRAZIL SECTION JOINT CHAPTER

#Sensors #Iot #Ultra-low #power
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This talk will review the integration of oxides and fully printable organics for newly emerging application areas related to wearables and the Internet of Things. We will discuss the critical design considerations to show how device-circuit interactions should be handled and how compensation methods can be implemented for stable and reliable operation. In particular, the quest for low power and high-resolution sensing becomes highly compelling in wearable devices. We will discuss transistor operation in the different regimes, and review device properties when operated in the deep sub-threshold regime or in near-OFF state, addressing the pivotal requirement of low supply voltage and ultralow-power leading to potentially battery-less operation.



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  • Date: 26 Apr 2022
  • Time: 12:00 PM to 01:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-03:00) Brasilia
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  Speakers

Arokia Nathan of University of Cambridge

Topic:

Ultra-Low Power Sensor Interfaces for IoT

This talk will review the integration of oxides and fully printable organics for newly emerging application areas related to wearables and the Internet of Things.

Biography:

Professor Arokia Nathan is the Professor of Photonic Systems and Displays in the Department of Engineering at the University of Cambridge. He received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of Alberta. Following post-doctoral years at LSI Logic Corp., USA and ETH Zurich, Switzerland, he joined the University of Waterloo where he held the DALSA/NSERC Industrial Research Chair in sensor technology and subsequently the Canada Research Chair in nano-scale flexible circuits.

He was a recipient of the 2001 NSERC E.W.R. Steacie Fellowship and in 2006, he moved to the UK to take up the Sumitomo Chair of Nanotechnology at the London Centre for Nanotechnology, University College London, where he received the Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award. He has held Visiting Professor appointments at the Physical Electronics Laboratory, ETH Zürich and the Engineering Department, University of Cambridge. He has published over 400 papers in the field of sensor technology and CAD, and thin film transistor electronics, and is a co-author of four books. He has over 50 patents filed/awarded and has founded/co-founded four spin-off companies. He serves on technical committees and editorial boards in various capacities. He is a Chartered Engineer (UK), Fellow of the Institution of Engineering and Technology (UK), Fellow of IEEE (USA), and an IEEE/EDS Distinguished Lecturer.

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Address:United Kingdom