Events

Electron Devices Distinguished Lecture: Signal Integrity and the Emerging Challenges of High-Speed Nanoscale Interconnects

12th May, at 3 p.m., at Alameda Campus

Date: 12th May
Hour: 3 p.m.
Venue: Room LT2, 4th floor, North Tower, Alameda Campus

«The Instituto de Telecomunicações is pleased to announce the Electron Devices Distinguished Lecture: Signal Integrity and the Emerging Challenges of High-Speed Nanoscale Interconnects, by Prof. Ramachandra Achar.

With the increasing demands for higher signal speeds coupled with the need for decreasing feature sizes, signal integrity effects such as delay, distortion, reflections, crosstalk, ground bounce and electromagnetic interference have become the dominant factors limiting the performance of high-speed systems. These effects can be diverse and can seriously impact the design performance at all hierarchical levels including integrated circuits, printed circuit boards, multi-chip modules and backplanes. If not considered during the design stage, signal integrity effects can cause failed designs. Since extra iterations in the design cycle are costly, accurate prediction of these effects is a necessity in high-speed designs. Consequently, preserving signal integrity has become one of the most challenging tasks facing designers of modern multifunction and miniature electronic circuits and systems. This talk provides a comprehensive approach to understanding the multidisciplinary problem of signal integrity: issues/modeling/analysis in high-speed designs.

Ramachandra Achar is a professor in the electronics engineering department at Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario. Prior to joining Carleton University (2000), he served in various capacities in leading research labs, including T. J. Watson Research Center, IBM, New York (1995), Larsen and Toubro Engineers Ltd., Mysore (1992), Central Electronics Engineering Research Institute, Pilani, India (1992) and Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India (1990).

Free event»