Electronic-photonic co-design; from optical phase control to optical computing
Integrated electronic-photonic co-design can profoundly impact both fields resulting in advances in several areas such as energy efficient communication, computation, signal processing, imaging, and sensing. Examples of integrated electronic-photonic co-design may be categorized into two groups: (a) electronic assisted photonics, where integrated analog, RF, mm-wave, and THz circuits are employed to improve the performance of photonic systems, and (b) photonic assisted electronics, where photonic systems and devices are used to improve the performance of integrated RF, mm-wave, and THz systems. In this talk, examples of electronic-photonic co-design such as photonic assisted near-field imaging, photonic-mmWave deep networks, and low power laser stabilization and linewidth reduction will be presented.
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- 40 St George Street
- University of Toronto
- Toronto, Ontario
- Canada
- Building: Bahen Centre for Information Technology
- Room Number: BA1200
Speakers
Firooz Aflatouni of University of Pennsylvania
Electronic-photonic co-design; from optical phase control to optical computing
Integrated electronic-photonic co-design can profoundly impact both fields resulting in advances in several areas such as energy efficient communication, computation, signal processing, imaging, and sensing. Examples of integrated electronic-photonic co-design may be categorized into two groups: (a) electronic assisted photonics, where integrated analog, RF, mm-wave, and THz circuits are employed to improve the performance of photonic systems, and (b) photonic assisted electronics, where photonic systems and devices are used to improve the performance of integrated RF, mm-wave, and THz systems. In this talk, examples of electronic-photonic co-design such as photonic assisted near-field imaging, photonic-mmWave deep networks, and low power laser stabilization and linewidth reduction will be presented.
Biography:
Firooz Aflatouni received the Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, in 2011. He was a post-doctoral scholar in the Department of Electrical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology before joining the University of Pennsylvania in 2014 where he is an Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering. His research interests include electronic-photonic co-design and low power RF and mm-wave integrated circuits. In 1999, he co-founded Pardis Bargh Company where he served as the CTO for five years working on design and manufacturing of inclined-orbit satellite tracking systems.
Firooz received the Bell Labs Prize in 2020, the Young Investigator Program (YIP) Award from the Office of Naval Research in 2019, the NASA Early Stage Innovation Award in 2019, and the 2015 IEEE Benjamin Franklin Key Award. He is a Distinguished Lecturer of the Solid-State Circuit Society and has served on several IEEE program committees (ISSCC, CICC, and IMS). He is an Associate Editor of the IEEE Open Journal of the Solid-State Circuits Society and currently serves as the chair of IEEE Solid State Circuits Society (SSCS) Philadelphia chapter.