Feb 17, 2026

[paper] Cryo FD SOI LNA Design

Giovani Britton, Salvador Mir, Estelle Lauga-Larroze, Benjamin Dormieu, Jose Lugo, Joao Azevedo, Sebastien Sadlo, Quentin Berlingard, Mikael Casse, Philippe Galy
Using DC transistor characterization measurements for LNA design at cryogenic temperatures
(2026) researchsquare.com
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-7754596/v1

1. STMicroelectronics, Crolles (F)
2. Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble-INP, TIMA, Grenoble (F)
3. Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CEA-Leti, Grenoble (F)
4. Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble-INP, IMEP-LAHC, Grenoble (F)

Abstract: The design of Radio Frequency (RF) cryogenic circuits has attracted much interest in recent years due to applications such as quantum computers. Interface electronics with ultra-low levels of power consumption at temperatures as low as 4 K are required. Silicon technologies are being considered for implementation because of the possibility of large-scale qubit integration with energy-efficient readout and control interfaces. However, the design of RF cryogenic circuits is complicated because of the lack of standard design kits with the corresponding component models for their simulation at these temperatures. Alternative approaches to avoid costly design and fabrication cycles are possible, in particular the use of Look-Up-Table (LUT) based techniques that exploit characterization data of circuit components at cryogenic temperature. In this paper, we make use of this approach for the design of a RF Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) using a 28 nm FD-SOI technology that has been characterized at cryogenic temperatures1using DC measurements. Furthermore, we also experimentally demonstrate that the DC measurements used are valid to extract the transistor noise parameters used in the LUT-based analysis.


Fig: Measurement of: (a) transconductance gm, and (b) threshold voltage Vth 
for the 28nm FD-SOI technology, from 300K down to 4K.

Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the French CIFRE program and the Labex MINOS of French program ANR-10-LABX-55-01.

Feb 15, 2026

[paper] From RTL to Prompt Coding Chip Design

Lukas Krupp∗, Matthew Venn† and Norbert Wehn∗
From RTL to Prompt Coding: Empowering the Next Generation of Chip Designers through LLMs
arXiv:2601.13815v1 [cs.AR] 20 Jan 2026

∗RPTU University of Kaiserslautern-Landau, Kaiserslautern, Germany
†Tiny Tapeout

Abstract: This paper presents an LLM-based learning platform for chip design education, aiming to make chip design accessible to beginners without overwhelming them with technical complexity. It represents the first educational platform that assists learners holistically across both frontend and backend design. The proposed approach integrates an LLM-based chat agent into a browser-based workflow built upon the Tiny Tapeout ecosystem. The workflow guides users from an initial design idea through RTL code generation to a tapeout-ready chip. To evaluate the concept, a case study was conducted with 18 high-school students. Within a 90-minute session they developed eight functional VGA chip designs in a 130 nm technology. Despite having no prior experience in chip design, all groups successfully implemented tapeout-ready projects. The results demonstrate the feasibility and educational impact of LLM-assisted chip design, highlighting its potential to attract and inspire early learners and significantly broaden the target audience for the field.

Fig: Overview of the proposed idea-to-GDSII learning workflow integrating the LLM-based chat agent for the RTL implementation, VGA simulation tool, and GitHub-driven backend flow.

Acknowledgments: This paper was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space (BMFTR) as part of the “Chipdesign Germany” project under grant number 16ME0890.

Feb 12, 2026

ChipFoundry Webinar Recording: New CLI, OpenFrame & Production


Feb 11, 2026

[C4P] ESSERC 2026


ESSERC 2026 PAPERS SUBMISSION DEADLINE 
APRIL 3, 2026

Papers submitted for ESSERC 2026 review must clearly state:
  • The purpose of the work
  • How and to what extent it advances the state-of-the art
  • Specific results and their impact.
Only work that has not been previously published or submitted elsewhere will be considered. Submission of a paper for review and subsequent acceptance is considered as a commitment that the work will not be publicly available prior to the conference. Measurement results or calibration against measured data is required to support the claims of the submitted paper.

ESSERC 2026 Conference Tracks 
  1. Advanced Technology, Process and Materials
  2. Analog, Power and RF Devices
  3. Modelling and Simulation of Electron Devices
  4. Analog Circuits
  5. Data Converters
  6. RF & mm‑Wave Circuits
  7. Frequency Generation Circuits
  8. Digital Circuits & Systems
  9. Power Management
  10. Wireless Systems
  11. Wireline and Optical Circuits and Systems
  12. Emerging Computing Devices and Circuits
  13. Architectures and Circuits for AI and ML
  14. Devices & Circuits for Sensors, Imagers and Displays
After selection of papers, the authors will be informed about the decision of the Technical Program Committee by e-mail by May 27, 2026.

At the same time, the complete program will be published on the conference website. An oral presentation will be given at the Conference for each accepted paper. No-shows will result in the exclusion of the papers from any conference related publication. The submitted final PDF files must be IEEE Xplore compliant.

Best Paper Award: Papers presented at the conference will be considered for the “Best Paper Award” and “Best Young Scientist Paper Award”. The selection will be based on the results of the paper selection process and the judgment of the conference participants. The award delivery will take place during ESSERC 2027.

For each paper independently, at least one (co-)author is required to register for the conference (one registration one paper policy). Registration fees and deadlines will be available on the conference website.

 

Feb 10, 2026

Open Silicon microelectronic bootcamp

Call for leaders to organize an Open Silicon microelectronic bootcamp
Bring Chip Design to Your Community!

Join the global Open Silicon movement and gain hands-on experience in chip design and fabrication. Our Q1 2026 bootcamps provide access, mentoring, and real silicon opportunities for students, educators, and innovators.

The IEEE is seeking passionate leaders from around the world to organize microelectronics design bootcamps in their local communities, under the IEEE division 1 OPEN SILICON initiative.
If you organize a bootcamp between February and May 2026, IEEE will sponsor the fabrication of three of your designs. You'll receive your fabricated chips (tape-out) mounted on a development board for testing and hands-on exploration.

Selected bootcamp leaders will be invited to an online training session with Matt Venn (Tiny Tapeout) during the last week of February.

To be considered, please provide the following information at REGISTRATION FORM

Key Dates:
  • Bootcamp Leader Registration Deadline: Sunday, February 22nd, 2026
  • Leader Training Session: Last week of February (TBD)
  • Bootcamp Period: March–May 2026
  • Tapeout Submission Deadline: March 23rd, 2026 / May 1st, 2026
  • Development Board Shipping: September 2026 / November 2026