100-300 GHz Wireless: Transistors, IC’s Systems
Distinguished Microwave Lecture
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- Date: 11 Apr 2025
- Time: 12:00 AM UTC to 01:15 AM UTC
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Speakers
Prof. Mark Rodwell of Univ. of Calif. Santa Barbara
Millimeter wave (100-300 GHz) devices and systems for communication and imaging
The opportunities and the research challenges are described for the development of 100-300GHz wireless communications and imaging systems. In such links, short wavelengths permit massive spatial multiplexing both for network nodes and point-point links, permitting aggregate transmission capacities approaching 1Tb/s. 100-300GHz radar imaging systems can provide thousands of image pixels and sub-degree angular resolution from small apertures, supporting foul-weather driving and aviation. Challenges include the mm-wave IC designs, the physical design of the front-end modules, the complexity of the back-end digital beamformer required for spatial multiplexing, and, for imaging, the development of system architectures requiring far fewer RF channels than the number of image pixels. Transistor development, IC design, and system design will be described for our efforts to develop 140GHz massive MIMO wireless hubs, and 210GHz and 280GHz MIMO backhaul links.
Biography:
Prof. Mark Rodwell holds the Doluca Family Endowed Chair in Electrical and Computer Engineering at UCSB and directs the SRC/DARPA Center for Converged TeraHertz Communications and Sensing. His research group develops nm and THz transistors, and high-frequency integrated circuits and systems. Prof. Rodwell received the 2010 IEEE Sarnoff Award, the 2012 Marconi Prize Paper Award, the 1997 IEEE Microwave Prize, the 2009 IEEE IPRM Conference Award, and the 1998 European Microwave Conference Microwave Prize.
Email: rodwell@ece.ucsb.edu
Address:Santa Barbara, California, United States, 93106