Apr 16, 2024
[paper] SiC Power MOSFET SPICE modelling
Nov 21, 2023
[webinar] Open Source Silicon Landscape
- Policymakers at the regional, national, and European level who want to strengthen their respective semiconductor ecosystem while collaborating and contributing to the Union’s industry as a whole
- Research and academia representatives who are interested in deepening their knowledge or discovering the potential of the Open Source Silicon landscape
- SMEs in the semiconductor industry who aim to expand and innovate their business by using a cutting-edge approach
- Start-ups that are eager to elevate their business to the next level by embracing vanguard strategies
- Citizen scientists and the general public who would like to have a better understanding of the new horizons in the semiconductor landscape
- Experts active in industrial development who are interested in integrating potential new approaches
The event is free of charge, but registration is mandatory. Registrants will receive the link to access the event by email.
11:00 - 11:05 | Welcome |
11:05 - 11:10 | Introducing Open Source Silicon |
11:10 - 11:20 | BACKGROUND Open source silicon between software and hardware Background |
11:20 - 11:40 | POLICY BRIEF PRESENTATION Open source silicon’s position in the semiconductor value chain |
11:40 - 12:35 | PANEL Key opportunities and threats relevant to open source silicon strategies |
12:35 - 12:45 | Q&A and conclusions |
Sep 18, 2023
[Workshop] QIP
Silicon Quantum Information Processing (QIP) is highly appealing due to excellent spin qubit performances and the expertise of the integrated circuit industry in device scaling. Demonstrations of long-lived, high-fidelity silicon qubits, multi-qubit gates and spin–photon coupling, are promising for the control and interconnect of QIP architectures. Recently, spin qubits in related semiconductors (e.g. germanium) have also emerged as promising implementations of scalable quantum hardware. The formidable challenge of scaling these systems to the level required for meaningful computational applications has also brought to the fore the need for robust cryo-CMOS electronics, which will enable fast control and data processing, as well as schemes to correct errors and protect against decoherence. This meeting will bring together leading researchers from the QIP communities of silicon and related semiconductors, as well as cryo-CMOS designers and engineers who are working at different layers of the “quantum stack”.
10:00AM- 10:10AM | Introduction |
10:10AM- 10:40AM |
Pablo Cova Farina Quantum dot ladders for quantum computation and simulation
|
10:40AM-11:00AM |
Federico Fedele Automatic techniques for fast and automatic all-rf tuning of quantum devices
|
11:00AM-11:30AM |
Mark Johnson Rapid characterisation of over 1000 silicon quantum dots
|
11:30AM-11:50AM | Break and refreshments |
11:50AM-12:20PM |
Gian Salis How are hole-spin qubits in Ge/SiGe heterostructures driven and why do they decohere?
|
12:20PM-12:40PM |
Ross Leon Exchange control in a MOS double quantum dot made on a 300mm process
|
12:40PM-1:10PM |
Asen Asenov A Methodology for Cryogenic PDK Re-Centering Using Experimental Data and TCAD Simulations
|
1:10PM-2:30PM |
Lunch
|
2:30PM-3:00PM |
Masoud Babaie A Cryo-CMOS Receiver for Spin Qubit Gate-Based Readout: from Modelling to Implementation and Verification
|
3:00PM-3:20PM |
Mathieu de Krujif Measurement of classical electronics heating a local quantum dot thermometer in silicon
|
3:20PM-3:40PM |
Janne Lehtinen Custom CMOS platform for quantum processor units
|
3:40PM-4:00PM |
Stavroula Kapoulea Towards the Development of Quantum Computing System-On-Chip: Bringing Electronics Closer to Qubits
|
4:00PM-4:10PM | Concluding remarks |
4:10PM-5:00PM | Refreshments |
5:00PM-6:00PM | Lab tour |
7:00PM-9:00PM | Conference Dinner |
Jan 30, 2023
[paper] ULTRARAM Memory on Silicon
Mar 18, 2022
[paper] Compound-Semiconductor Memory on Silicon
Richard Beanland, and Manus Hayne
Department of Physics, University of Warwick (UK)
Jun 25, 2020
Neurotransistor MatLab Code
Code availability: The MatLab code that supports the mathematical model in this article is available
at https://github.com/eunhye8747/MatLab-Code-Neurotransistor
Dec 21, 2017
[call for papers] EUROSOI-ULIS2018, Granada
Papers in the following areas are solicited:
• Advanced SOI materials and wafers. Physical mechanisms and innovative SOI-like devices.
• New channel materials for CMOS: strained Si, strained SOI, SiGe, GeOI, III-V and high mobility materials on insulator; carbon nanotubes; graphene and other two-dimensional materials.
• Properties of ultra-thin films and buried oxides, defects, interface quality. Thin gate dielectrics: high-κ materials for switches and memory.
• Nanometer scale devices: technology, characterization techniques and evaluation metrics for high performance, low power, low standby power, high frequency and memory applications.
• Alternative transistor architectures including FDSOI, DGSOI, FinFET, MuGFET, vertical MOSFET, Nanowires, FeFET and Tunnel FET, MEMS/NEMS, Beyond-CMOS nanoelectronic devices.
• New functionalities in silicon-compatible nanostructures and innovative devices representing the More than Moore domain, nanoelectronic sensors, biosensor devices, energy harvesting devices, RF devices, imagers, etc.
• CMOS scaling perspectives; device/circuit level performance evaluation; switches and memory scaling. Three-dimensional integration of devices and circuits, heterogeneous integration.
• Transport phenomena, compact modeling, device simulation, front- and back-end process simulation.
• Advanced test structures and characterization techniques, parameter extraction, reliability and variability assessment techniques for new materials and novel devices.
• Emerging memory devices
Invited Speakers:
• Prof. Jesús del Alamo (MIT, USA): III-V CMOS: Quo vadis?
• Prof. Hiroshi Iwai (TIT, Japan): 3D scaling of Si-IGBT.
• Prof. Enrique Calleja (Uni Madrid, Spain): MBE growth of ordered InGaN/GaN nano/microrods: basics and applications.
• Prof. Edward Yi Chang (NCTU, Taiwan): High performance GaN HEMT technologies.
• Prof. Adrian Ionescu (EPFL, Switzerland): Millivolt technology for low power digital and sensing applications.
• Dr. Byungil Kwak (SK Hynix, Korea): DRAM Peripheral Transistor Scaling using logic technologies – Future Challenges.
Nov 11, 2015
[ESSCIRC 2015] Low-power analog RF circuit design based on the inversion coefficient
Keywords: Analytical models, Integrated circuits, Noise, Radio frequency, Silicon, Transconductance, Transistors, BSIM6
URL / doi: 10.1109/ESSCIRC.2015.7313863