CONFERENCES & conventions, SOLID state electronics, ANALOG-to-digital converters, DIGITAL electronics
Abstract
Information about several papers discussed during the International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) held on February 2007 in San Francisco, California is presented. It highlights discussions about the recent applications of analog-to-digital converters (ADC), as well as its newest upgrades. It includes the introduction of a successive approximation register (SAR) ADC for applications down to 4.2 Kelvin. Moreover, ADC designers revealed advances in dynamic range and power consumption.
SUPERCONDUCTORS, SOLID state electronics, SCIENTISTS, MAGNESIUM diboride, CARBON dioxide
Abstract
This article presents information on superconductors. The article presents the superconductor designed by scientist Warren Pickett from the University of California. He found that his brown powder, magnesium diboride has lost his resistance at 40 K. To alter this he has sketched out a material that superconducts above room temperature. Superconductors are efficient and have the capacity to prevent tonnes of carbon dioxide from being emitted each year.
*CONFERENCES & conventions, *SOLID state electronics
Abstract
Information on the Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers Inc. (IEEE) International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) 2010 held on February 7-11, 2010 in San Franscisco, California is presented. The conference centered on three-dimensional (3D) integration technologies such as system-in-package, through-silicon via (TSV) and contactless chip-to-chip communication. In addition, Intel Corp. also presented papers on 32 nanometers "Westmere" processors.
*SOLID state electronics, *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations, *CONFERENCES & conventions
Abstract
The article reports that Rambus Inc. will reveal a technique for delivering Input/Output with power rates of 2.2 milli-watts per gigabit per second, at the 2007 International Solid-State Circuits Conference in San Francisco, California. In its prepared paper, Rambus Inc. will describe a 6-Gbit/second serializer/deserializer transceiver at 2.2 mW/Gbit/s in 90-nanometer process technology. The company believes that the technology would achieve power reduction and would deliver high performance.
*SOLID state electronics, *CONFERENCES & conventions
Abstract
Provides information on the 50th International Solid-State Circuits Conference that will be held on February 10, 2003 in San Francisco, California. Theme of the keynote speech that will be delivered by Gordon Moore, chairman emeritus of Intel Corp.; Paper sessions; Panels; Workshops.
A microprocessor clocking at 15.2GHz and drawing just 1.6mW is being described this week at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference, in San Francisco, California. This low power is achieved using 5,000 superconducting Josephson junctions made from niobium. Not only that, instructions and data in the 8-bit processor are transferred in a single flux quantum (SFQ). The low power is due to pulse widths of a few picosecond and heights under 1mV. SFQ circuits process data by observing the pulse shape when single quanta pass through a superconducting ring containing the Josephson junctions.
Published
2004
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