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Electronic Engineering – Research that Transforms our Lives Tom Brazil PhD, FIEEE, MRIA Professor of Electronic Engineering University College Dublin In the past 4 decades, no other discipline has more profoundly changed the way we communicate, find information, do business, entertain ourselves… … why is this? … will it continue? … what more is to come? EE: “Electronic Engineering” Some distinctive characteristics.. • EE involves both (charged) matter and (electromagnetic) radiation; • EE is highly research-intensive with a strong coupling to mathematics and physics; • For over 40 years implementation has been driven by an exponential underpinning technology trend (‘Moore’s Law’) Various Perspectives on EE • Level of Physical Reality: – Electronic properties of materials/ Electromagnetic (EM) radiation (devices, transistors, electronic circuits, Integrated Circuits (ICs) etc..) • Abstract Level: – EE is about generation, processing, storage and transmission of signals (i.e. information in electrical form) (algorithms, coding, modulation, software …) These Two Perspectives Evident in UG Degree Subjects… • Solid-State Electronics; Electromagetics; Electronic Circuits – Physics; Mathematical Physics, Chemistry… • Circuit Theory; Control Theory; Communications Theory; Computer Engineering; Linear and Nonlinear Systems; Software – Mathematics; Statistics; Computer Science … … of course yet another perspective of EE could be based on Applications … How to Proceed…? • Overview of Major Trends In EE: – taking the perspective of (dual) physical reality in EE: PARTICLE (Charge) & WAVE (Electromagnetic) • EE at UCD: – current status, future opportunities Wave-Particle Duality • The everyday physical world seems to us to be composed of matter (dust, stars…) and radiation (heat, light…) • The insights of Einstein (1905) and de Broglie (1924) contributed to the view that this may be just our perception: at a deep level they could the same • Eventually this concept of ‘wave particle duality’ became a fundamental aspect of the development of the modern theory of quantum mechanics E p k particle wave Duality in EE • This wave-particle duality is also fundamental to EE: – The engineering of charged matter – The engineering of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum • EE is unique among the Engineering disciplines in placing such strong emphasis on both matter and the EM spectrum! Theme (1): The Engineering of Charged Particles Electronic Devices & Circuits Electronic Devices & Circuits • Era of Valve (Tube) Electronics ~1900s1950s – First electronic device: audion tube (Lee de Forest, 1905) • Semiconductor Era ~1950s to 2020 (?) – Effectively began with invention of transistor in 1947 by Bardeen, Brittain and Shockley • Post-Semiconductor Era? – Devices based on new materials and/or more directly exploiting quantum mechanics …. Moore’s Law In 1965, Gordon Moore, the founder of Intel, postulated what was to come to be known as ‘Moore’s Law’: “the power of the silicon chip will double every 18-24 months, with a proportionate decrease in cost “ 222 ~ 4,000,000 over 40 years Microprocessors • In 30 years the number of transistors on a microprocessor chip has increased by a factor of over 77,000, from 2,300 transistors on the 4004 in 1971 to 178 million transistors on an Intel Pentium® 4. • Product speed has increased in a similar fashion, with the earliest 4004 processors running at 100kHz vs. the current Intel Pentium® 4 Processor at 3.8 GHz, a factor of 38,000. ICs: Huge Increase in Complexity at lower cost… Smaller means faster! Current IC Technology • Current technology ‘node’ is 65nm in CMOS (‘nanoelectronics’) • Severe challenges being overcome: material dispersion, modelling, signal integrity, thermal management… • Reconfigurable computing concepts are increasingly dominant • Emphasis on System-on-Chip (Soc) or System-in-Package (SiP) combining various technologies in a single platform Detailed Cross-Section near surface of advanced CMOS IC ~ 2km of interconnect on one 10mmx10mm IC! 6 separate layers of metal interconnect, with connecting ‘vias’ MOS transistor What does the future hold? “The scaling of CMOS device and process technology, as it is known today, likely will end by the 16nm node (7nm physical channel length) by 2019.” Source: ITRC Roadmap 2004 • The end of CMOS will effectively be the end of the evolution of chargebased electronics; • Beyond that new device concepts are likely to emerge more directly exploiting quantum mechanics; Molecular Quantum-Effect Device Theme (2): The Engineering of Electromagnetic Waves Wireless, Microwave… Wireless, Microwave… • Linked to the development of electronic devices and components, the history of EE has involved exploiting the EM spectrum at steadily higher frequencies • Each advance has been critically dependent on the availability of sources, amplifiers and detectors Wireless, Microwaves… • Maxwell 1865 Theory of EM Waves • Hertz 1885 Experimental demonstration of radio • Marconi – 1895 (Bologna) First communication by microwaves – 1899 (Dun Laoghaire) Worlds first outside sports broadcast – 1933 (Vatican City) First voice link by microwaves • WWII Huge advances in radar technology • Post-war: network TV, satellites, space .. • 1990’s: Wireless revolution! Vision of Future Wireless Systems Technical Trends • Data rates and system center frequencies will increase. • The most advanced transmission techniques in space-time-frequency domain must be used to increase spectral efficiency. • Radio systems will be adaptive. • Energy-constrained wireless nodes • Networks are partially based on Ad-Hoc techniques. • Flexible radio transceiver techniques are needed. 79GHz Anti-collision Radars sensor height 47 cm The Final Frontier? TeraHertz historical trend in EE A vast ~unexploited part of the EM spectrum optoelectronics Problem to Date: lack of sourcesbeing addressed NB: Terahertz is non-ionising! Applications: Numerous!! (Radio Astronomy) A Radio Telescope for Ireland (ARTI) • Between 1845 and 1918, the largest (optical) telescope in the world was located in Birr, Co. Offaly; • In 2002 Lord Rosse donated a site at Birr for a proposed new radio telescope, linking Ireland to a European network of such telescopes • Just €10M needed now! Research in Electronic Engineering • Intense levels of research and innovation are characteristic of EE • The research is highly rigorous and scientific (e.g. IEEE Transactions…): often closely linked to and even driving comparable research in mathematics, physics etc • Research may often be very fundamental, but a breakthrough can be immediately applied in industry or to society Research in EE in UCD • Very strong, long-established ethos of top-level international research in Electronic Engineering in UCD • Built up by Sean Scanlan (Professor of Electronic Engineering, UCD 19732002) • Excellent individual achievements: challenge now is to expand on a large scale at institutional level EE Research Performance • October 2004: 15 full-time academic staff; • 48 PhD students, 12 research Masters (3.x PhDs per academic) • €2.4M cash income in previous 12 months • Xx publications in leading peer-reviewed international journals and conference proceedings Research Themes: UCD EE • Broad Theme of Physical Layer Communications • Specific world-class teams in signal processing, nonlinear circuits & systems, microwave/RF and optoelectronics • Generic competence in electronic simulation, modelling and design • Strong interdisciplinary focus around rapidly growing area of biomedical engineering Design in Electronic Engineering • Traditional Approach – Use a mixture of intuition, past experience, simple analysis, prototyping, trial & error… • Computer Aided Design (CAD) – Create a mathematical model of possible realisation and relate parameters of model to measurable quantities. Then analyse, tune, optimise… EE CAD: Circuit Theory CAD of Microwave Systems e.g. GaAs MMIC for 77GHz automotive radar (ca. 1mm2) Standard Lumped/ Distributed Circuit Elements Non-linear Transistor Models dy t f y t ,t dt S-parameter blocks A special feature of microwave analysis My Research: Microwave CAD • Non-linear equivalent circuit and physicsbased models of microwave transistors; • Algorithms for combining frequencydomain (S-parameter) blocks within transient time-domain analysis; • Behavioural level models for describing complete high frequency systems – SFI Investigator Award (€1.3M) – EU Network of Excellence (TARGET) – UCD Patent, EI Support, industry etc.. Non-linear Modelling of Microwave FET V Devices G RG VS RS n n nv t t c p v p p v t p qnE nT t c W v W t Gate QGD QGS VD RD N-epi Source Drain iDS (Intrinsic part only) DGD CGD G D RGDI CGS DGS RGSI S IDS IAC CX GDS qnv E v nT W u t c E q N d Na n Hydrodynamic equations: (n = electron conc.; p = momentum; W= energy density; u = heat flux) Equivalent circuit model Time-Domain/FrequencyDomain Nonlinear Simulation source FET model General, linear time-invariant network [S(f)] FET model FET model behavioual or system-level model load Example of General Network: S21(f) 0 -10 -20 -30 -40 -50 -60 I.R. Weight 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Frequency (GHz) 100 0 -100 Voltage (V) 200 -200 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Frequency (GHz) 0 0.5 1 Tim e 1.5 2 0.12 0.08 0.04 0 -0.04 -0.08 -0.12 0 0.4 0.8 1.2 Tim e (nsec) 1.6 Bevavioural Modelling: Discrete Time Volterra Series Linear system m 1 y (n) w(i ) x(n i ) Nonlinear system m 1 y (n) ai [ x(n)]i with memory i 0 without memory i 0 w(0) x(n) w(1) x(n 1) a0 a1 x(n) a2 [ x(n)]2 m 1 m 1 m 1 i 0 i 0 j 0 2nd-order Volterra kernel y (n) h1 (i ) x(n i ) h2 (i, j ) x(n i ) x(n j ) m 1 m 1 m 1 3rd-order Volterra kernel h3 (i, j , k ) x(n i ) x(n j ) x(n k ) i 0 j 0 k 0 Volterra Series (Complex Envelope Discrete Time Formulation) Nonlinear system with memory Baseband Input b Main Amplifier Complex Multiplier Mod. RF Output LUT Predistortion Calculation Volterra Model used to Generate required pre-distortion Application of Volterra Model: reducing nonlinear distortion produced by wireless amplifier Dem. RF Output: Without Predistortion With Predistortion Basic Research in EE • Research is fundamental to EE • The best of that research poses some of the most fundamental mathematical and physical challenges • EE research draws on a broad range of skills and disciplines (including circuit theory, circuits and systems…) • A breakthrough is immediately applicable! EE Research in Ireland • Science Foundation Ireland’s prioritisation of ICT is welcome • The Irish electronics industry does not have a secure future without a strong base of top-level national research • BUT: Ireland’s academic research infrastructure in EE is relatively weak • Critical investments are now needed for our future success Conclusions • The story of Electronic Engineering in the last 50 years is absolutely astonishing: it has truly transformed our lives • Yet there is vast amount more to come – the historical pace of change will continue for at least two more decades • Ireland faces fundamental structural challenges in responding to this. We are at a critical stage and must make the right decisions for future economic success • Electronic Engineering is one of UCD’s true ‘star’ centres of research: it is ready and willing to continue to play its part in building a successful future for the university and the country