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ESE Spring Seminar – “Surpassing Fundamental Limits through Time Varying Electromagnetics”

March 17, 2022 at 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Details
Date: March 17, 2022
Time: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Event Category: SeminarColloquium
  • Event Tags:
  • Organizer
    Electrical and Systems Engineering
    Phone: 215-898-6823
    Venue
    Raisler Lounge (Room 225), Towne Building 220 South 33rd Street
    Philadelphia
    PA 19104
    Google Map

    Surpassing the fundamental limits that govern all electromagnetic structures, such as reciprocity and the delay-bandwidth-size limit, will have a transformative impact on all applications based on electromagnetic circuits and systems. For instance, violating principles of reciprocity enables non-reciprocal components such as isolators and circulators, which find application in full-duplex wireless radios, radar, bio-medical imaging, and quantum computing systems. Overcoming the delay-bandwidth-size limit enables ultra-broadband yet extremely-compact devices whose size is not fundamentally related to the wavelength at the operating frequency.

    The focus of my talk will be on using time-variance as a new toolbox to overcome these fundamental limits and re-imagine circuit design. Specifically, I will focus on CMOS-integrated time-varying circuits and systems that have enabled: (i) integrated non-reciprocal components operating across frequencies ranging from RF to millimeter waves with multi-watt power handling, (ii) reconfigurable microwave passive components with 100-1000× form-factor reduction, (iii) integrated full-duplex wireless radios with wideband self-interference cancellation, and (iv) the first non-reciprocal Floquet electromagnetic topological insulator with an ultra-wide bandgap. Our prototypes achieve the stringent performance envelopes that are required by practical wireless applications, thus bringing the fields of integrated non-reciprocity and synthetic topological insulators to real-world applications.

    I will also briefly cover my future research plans on harmonic-tuned, higher-order N-path filters and cross-disciplinary collaborative research on using time-varying circuits and CMOS based ICs in cryogenic quantum computing applications.