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An investigation of grounding techniques in microwave amplifiers

Authors :
R.K. Sorensen
W.W.G. Hui
Chang Soo Suh
K.S. Ching
J.M. Bell
Chenyan Song
G.S. Shiroma
T.A. Heffner
Wayne A. Shiroma
Source :
Proceedings of the 16th International Symposium on Power Semiconductor Devices & IC's.
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
IEEE, 2004.

Abstract

The current revolution in wireless communications has created a critical need for engineering graduates in this field, and has sparked renewed interest in RF/microwave circuits and systems courses. The University of Hawaii has developed a discovery-based, graduate-level laboratory course in active microwave electronics that has several distinguishing features compared to conventional graduate-level microwave courses: (1) instead of a traditional lecture format, the course is taught in studio mode, in which all student activities take place in a research laboratory that has separate stations for computer-aided design, fabrication, and measurement; (2) the instructor provides minimal guidance to the students, and instead relies on group discussions to elicit critical design methodologies; (3) the design projects are not typical canned experiments, but rather open-ended projects that emphasize self discovery. We present one of the projects from this course. Each student was given the mission of designing, fabricating, measuring, and modeling a 10-GHz maximum-gain amplifier. While seemingly a straightforward objective, the students found many obstacles along the way that provided invaluable opportunities for self discovery.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the 16th International Symposium on Power Semiconductor Devices & IC's
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........02fd5765bdf85ba09ceec6633f3d74a8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/wct.2003.1321473