Chinmaya Mishra of Texas A & M University in College Station, Texas
and Peter Popplewell of Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada have
won the Solid-State Circuits Society Predoctoral Fellowship for 2006 - 2007.
They were selected "based upon their considerable accomplishments to date
and their great promise for future contributions to the field of solid- state
circuits," said Prof. David Hodges of the University of California,
Berkeley, Chair of the Award Committee.
Inaugurated in 1983 but suspended between 2003 - 2005, the
predoctoral
fellowship program provides a stipend of $15,000, tuition and fees up
to $8,000, and a grant of $2,000 to the department in which the recipient is
registered. Applicants are required to have completed one year of graduate
study, be in a Ph.D. program in the area of solid-state circuits, and belong
to IEEE.
Chinmaya Mishra (S’03) received the B.E. degree in
Electrical and Electronics Engineering with distinction from Birla Institute of
Technology and Science, Pilani, India in 2002 and was awarded the Merit
Scholarship for being among the top ten of all students in the entire
University for the class of 2002.
In the spring of 2002 he was a technical intern in the DSP Design Group at
Texas Instruments Inc., Bangalore, India where he worked on formal verification
of hardware circuits. He received the M.S. degree in Electrical Engineering
from Texas A&M University, College Station in 2004 with a GPR of 4.0. His
thesis focused on the design and implementation of low power multistage
amplifiers and high frequency (>10GHz) broadband distributed amplifiers in
CMOS.
From the fall of 2002 to fall 2004, he was a Texas Instruments Research
Assistant in the Analog and Mixed Signal Center (AMSC). During this period he
co-developed two novel, power and area efficient frequency compensation schemes
for low-voltage multistage amplifiers driving large capacitive loads. This work
resulted in a publication in the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits (JSSC),
which was listed as one of the most read JSSC articles in the first quarter of
2005 and one of the top 100 documents accessed in the entire IEEE in April
2005.
Since September 2004, he has been working towards his Ph.D. degree at the AMSC
under the supervision of Dr. Edgar Sánchez-Sinencio. From spring 2004 to
fall 2005 he was part of a team that developed the first multiband UWB receiver
system in a package operating from 3-10GHz. He was responsible for the
development of the frequency band plan and the design of frequency synthesizers
for multiband OFDM based UWB radios. His pioneering theoretical work on UWB
frequency synthesis resulted in a Transactions on Microwave Theory and
Techniques publication which was listed as one of the top 100 documents
accessed in the entire IEEE in December 2005.
In the spring of 2005 he was a graduate assistant lecturer in the department of
electrical engineering at Texas A&M University and was the instructor for
the course ELEN 326 Electronics Circuits. During the summer of 2005, he was a
RF IC Design Engineer intern at WiQuest Communications Inc, Allen, Texas, where
he worked on the design of a CMOS frequency synthesizer for an ultra-wideband
(UWB) radio which resulted in a U.S. patent application. In the fall of 2005,
he was a teaching assistant in the department of electrical engineering for two
courses, ELEN 665, Integrated CMOS RF Circuits and ELEN 325, Electronics.
Since February, 2006 he has been a technical co-op in the Communications
Technology Department of IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights,
New York, where he is working on the design of millimeter wave circuits. His
research interests include RF, microwave and millimeter wave circuit design on
silicon and low voltage low power analog circuits.
Peter H. R. Popplewell (S’98) was born in
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada in 1979. He received the B.Eng. degree in 2002
and the M.A.Sc. degree in 2004, both in electrical engineering from Carleton
University in Ottawa. While an undergraduate, he was employed by Nortel
Networks’ Long-Haul Optical Networks Group as part of the team that
tested and designed erbium-doped and distributed-Raman optical
amplifiers. As a Master’s student he was a resident researcher at
Conexant Systems Inc. and eventually Skyworks Solutions Inc., where he studied
the behavior of integrated voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs) focusing on
VCO injection locking. This research led him to design, manufacture and
test an IC for measuring coupling between on-chip inductors using
injection-locked VCOs which doubled as short range wireless communication
devices.
With the help of fellow Ph.D. researcher Victor Karam at Carleton
University, he recently submitted a complete 5.2 GHz transceiver, which uses
VCO injection locking to achieve very low power consumption, for fabrication by
IBM through MOSIS. The circuit is revolutionary in that it is completely
integrated, using on-chip antennas, and is self-powered by a thin film
ultra-capacitor and solar cell which could be stacked on top of the chip.
Because the circuit is completely integrated, including the antenna and power
supply, it is ideally suited for applications where low cost is essential, such
as RFID tags for merchandise. The solution is also well suited for use in
dosimeters which measure radiation dosages received by cancer patients during
treatment.
Mr. Popplewell has received numerous Canadian national awards and
scholarships for his research, including a Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council (NSERC) PGS-D Ph.D. Scholarship and a 2005 Canadian Wireless
Telecommunications Association (CWTA) Graduate Scholarship. He has published
papers in the proceedings of the IEEE's BCTM, CICC and other
conferences, and has also been published in the Journal of
Solid-State Circuits. A patent for a Lower Power, Integrated Radio
Transmitter and Receiver filed in May is currently under review by The Canadian
Patent Office.
While completing his Ph.D. degree, he continues to collaborate with Skyworks
Solutions Inc. to research very low power and self powered RFIC designs for
wireless applications focusing on RFID tags and medical sensors for treating
cancer patients.