|
Georgia
Tech
Updated March
31, 2008
Click
here to go to our main college page
New for March 2008! We're
finally getting around to splitting up our college page, it's way
to big already and it barely scratches the surface of the programs
that are out there. Contact us if you want your college to get its
own page!
Georgia Tech Professor Kevin
Kornegay has agreed to represent Georgia Tech here at Microwaves101
and post his contact info here. His background includes a B.E.E.
from Pratt Institute in 1985 and his M.S. and Ph.D. from the University
of California at Berkeley in Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science in 1990 and 1992. He's worked at Purdue, Cornell and he's
now at Georgia Tech.
So, why would you want to go
to Georgia Tech and talk to Professor Kornegay, beside the fact
that his picture shows he's a well dressed, handsome man and Atlanta
has nice weather? Sure, Georgia Tech provides a nice campus, but
there's so much more. Kornegay's group has focussed on the possibilities
of millimeterwave circuits using production processes at IBM's SiGe
foundry in Vermont. Using plain "old" 8HP, they've managed
to stake out a ton of figure-of-merit records for gain, power consumption,
noise figure at frequencies that include Q band and W-band. Just
a few years ago, no one would have thought it to be possible to
achieve 12.5 dB per stage at greater than 90 GHz. Thanks to Kornegay's
team, it's now routine. Achievements like this go way beyond being
in the right place at the right time to leverage the latest device
technology, a new low-loss transmission line had to be developed
that takes advantage three-dimensional possibilities of IBM's metal
stack above the lossy silicon substrate (think CPW combined with
microstrip). Nothing is wasted on these circuits, the blank area
is consumed using a high-density capacitor technique for bias bypass
circuits. This is a whole new ballgame compared to the 2D life most
MMIC designers are used to.
Below are some images of millimeterwave
SiGe circuits developed by GT. Here's the low-loss transmission
line they use, it works so well IBM added it to their design kit!

Here's a two-stage
LNA die photo. It works at 60 GHz. Dimensions are ....

Here's its simplified schematic:

Technical Interest Groups (TIGs)
For the following explanation
of how Georgia Tech's microwave/RF capabilities are organized, we
offer most of the credit to Drew. Thanks!
Professor Kornegay is a member
of the Microelectronics/Microsystems
technical interest group (TIG), which is concerned with the design,
analysis, growth, and fabrication of micron/sub-micron feature length
devices.
Other Georgia Tech TIGs that
are of interest to microwave types include electromagnetics (Emag)
and Electronic Design and Applications (EDA)
groups. In general, the Emag group works on things like propagation,
antennas, and Emag applications like radar and remote sensing. The
EDA group works on, among other things, RF hardware. Here's some
contacts from both groups:
- Paul Steffes: Right now,
he is working on a project called Juno, which is a NASA mission
to Jupiter. His specific role is developing the hardware and techniques
for remote sensing of the water and ammonia content of Jupiter's
atmosphere. Those compounds give off radiation at microwave frequencies
that is attenuated in certain ways based on a number of different
factors. In short, he is the person to talk to for microwave remote
sensing at Georgia Tech.
- John Papapolymerou: He is
actually dual-hatted within Emag and EDA, and is probably an excellent
guy to talk to for RF hardware at microwave. His research group
is called the Microwave Circuit Technology Group (MIRCTECH).
Among other things he's working on Cognitive Radio (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_radio
for more information).
- Manos Tentzeris: He's involved
in the field of antennas, but his group does some work with RFID
(including RFID at microwave).
- John Cressler: He's involved
in the Electronic Design and Applications TIG. He previously worked
at IBM and one of his major interests is silicon germanium.
John
D. Cressler, Ph.D.
Ken Byers Professor
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
777 Atlantic Drive, N.W.
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA 30332-0250 USA
cressler@ece.gatech.edu
Georgia Tech Research Institute
Georgia Tech Research Institute
(GTRI) does a lot of government and defense work (and therefore
they do not have much contact with GT students). GTRI partners with
many well-known U.S. defense contractors for bleeding edge research.
For applied microwave research, check out Georgia Tech's sensors
and electromagnetic applications laboratory (SEAL).
|