11,760 research outputs found
Characterization of real time iterative array by alternating device
AbstractIn this paper, we show that real time k-dimensional iterative arrays are equivalent through reverse to real time one-way alternating k-counter automata
Tensor Computation: A New Framework for High-Dimensional Problems in EDA
Many critical EDA problems suffer from the curse of dimensionality, i.e. the
very fast-scaling computational burden produced by large number of parameters
and/or unknown variables. This phenomenon may be caused by multiple spatial or
temporal factors (e.g. 3-D field solvers discretizations and multi-rate circuit
simulation), nonlinearity of devices and circuits, large number of design or
optimization parameters (e.g. full-chip routing/placement and circuit sizing),
or extensive process variations (e.g. variability/reliability analysis and
design for manufacturability). The computational challenges generated by such
high dimensional problems are generally hard to handle efficiently with
traditional EDA core algorithms that are based on matrix and vector
computation. This paper presents "tensor computation" as an alternative general
framework for the development of efficient EDA algorithms and tools. A tensor
is a high-dimensional generalization of a matrix and a vector, and is a natural
choice for both storing and solving efficiently high-dimensional EDA problems.
This paper gives a basic tutorial on tensors, demonstrates some recent examples
of EDA applications (e.g., nonlinear circuit modeling and high-dimensional
uncertainty quantification), and suggests further open EDA problems where the
use of tensor computation could be of advantage.Comment: 14 figures. Accepted by IEEE Trans. CAD of Integrated Circuits and
System
Hardware Impairments Aware Transceiver Design for Bidirectional Full-Duplex MIMO OFDM Systems
In this paper we address the linear precoding and decoding design problem for
a bidirectional orthogonal frequencydivision multiplexing (OFDM) communication
system, between two multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) full-duplex (FD)
nodes. The effects of hardware distortion as well as the channel state
information error are taken into account. In the first step, we transform the
available time-domain characterization of the hardware distortions for FD MIMO
transceivers to the frequency domain, via a linear Fourier transformation. As a
result, the explicit impact of hardware inaccuracies on the residual
selfinterference (RSI) and inter-carrier leakage (ICL) is formulated in
relation to the intended transmit/received signals. Afterwards, linear
precoding and decoding designs are proposed to enhance the system performance
following the minimum-mean-squarederror (MMSE) and sum rate maximization
strategies, assuming the availability of perfect or erroneous CSI. The proposed
designs are based on the application of alternating optimization over the
system parameters, leading to a necessary convergence. Numerical results
indicate that the application of a distortionaware design is essential for a
system with a high hardware distortion, or for a system with a low thermal
noise variance.Comment: Submitted to IEEE for publicatio
Theory and simulation of subwavelength high contrast gratings and their applications in vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser devices
This work intends to fully explore the qualities and applications of subwavelength gratings. Subwavelength gratings are diffraction gratings with physical dimensions less than the wavelength of incident light. It has been found that by tailoring specific dimension parameters, a number of different reflection profiles can be attained by these structures including high reflectivity or low reflectivity with broad and narrow spectral responses. In the course of this thesis the physical basis for this phenomenon will be presented as well as a mathematical derivation. After discussion of the mechanics of the reflection behavior, the methods used in modeling subwavelength gratings and designing them for specific functions will be explored. Following this, the fundamentals of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) will be discussed, and the applications of subwavelength gratings when used with these lasers will follow. Several devices, both theoretical proposals and fabricated examples, will be presented in addition to the available performance measurements. Finally, the fabrication challenges that restrict subwavelength gratings from adoption as standard components in VCSEL design will be considered with regard to ongoing fabrication research
Progress towards photonic crystal quantum cascade laser
The work describes recent progress in the design, simulation, implementation and characterisation of photonic crystal (PhC) GaAs-based quantum cascade lasers (QCLs). The benefits of applying active PhC confinement around a QCL cavity are explained, highlighting a route to reduced threshold current operation. Design of a suitable PhC has been performed using published bandgap maps; simulation results of this PhC show a wide, high reflectivity stopband. Implementation of the PhC for the device is particularly difficult, requiring a very durable metallic dry etch mask, high performance dry etching and a low damage epilayer-down device mounting technique. Preliminary shallow etched PhC QCLs demonstrated the viability of current injection through the metal etch mask and the device mounting technique. Development of the etch mask and dry etching have demonstrated a process suitable for the manufacture of deep etched PhC structures. All the necessary elements for implementing deep etched PhC QCLs have now been demonstrated, allowing for the development of high performance devices
Single-shot non-interferometric measurement of the phase transmission matrix in multicore fibers
A simple technique for far-field single-shot non-interferometric
determination of the phase transmission matrix of a multicore fiber with over
100 cores is presented. This phase retrieval technique relies on the aperiodic
arrangement of the cores.Comment: Submitted to Optics Letter
Wideband digital phase comparator for high current shunts
A wideband phase comparator for precise measurements of phase difference of
high current shunts has been developed at INRIM. The two-input digital phase
detector is realized with a precision wideband digitizer connected through a
pair of symmetric active guarded transformers to the outputs of the shunts
under comparison. Data are first acquired asynchronously, and then transferred
from on-board memory to host memory. Because of the large amount of data
collected the filtering process and the analysis algorithms are performed
outside the acquisition routine. Most of the systematic errors can be
compensated by a proper inversion procedure.
The system is suitable for comparing shunts in a wide range of currents, from
several hundred of milliampere up to 100 A, and frequencies ranging between 500
Hz and 100 kHz. Expanded uncertainty (k=2) less than 0.05 mrad, for frequency
up to 100 kHz, is obtained in the measurement of the phase difference of a
group of 10 A shunts, provided by some European NMIs, using a digitizer with
sampling frequency up to 1 MHz. An enhanced version of the phase comparator
employs a new digital phase detector with higher sampling frequency and
vertical resolution. This permits to decrease the contribution to the
uncertainty budget of the phase detector of a factor two from 20 kHz to 100
kHz. Theories and experiments show that the phase difference between two high
precision wideband digitizers, coupled as phase detector, depends on multiple
factors derived from both analog and digital imprint of each sampling system.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
Speeding up liquid crystal SLMs using overdrive with phase change reduction
Nematic liquid crystal spatial light modulators (SLMs) with fast switching times and high diffraction efficiency are important to various applications ranging from optical beam steering and adaptive optics to optical tweezers. Here we demonstrate the great benefits that can be derived in terms of speed enhancement without loss of diffraction efficiency from two mutually compatible approaches. The first technique involves the idea of overdrive, that is the calculation of intermediate patterns to speed up the transition to the target phase pattern. The second concerns optimization of the target pattern to reduce the required phase change applied to each pixel, which in addition leads to a substantial reduction of variations in the intensity of the diffracted light during the transition. When these methods are applied together, we observe transition times for the diffracted light fields of about 1 ms, which represents up to a tenfold improvement over current approaches. We experimentally demonstrate the improvements of the approach for applications such as holographic image projection, beam steering and switching, and real-time control loops
Building Near-Real-Time Processing Pipelines with the Spark-MPI Platform
Advances in detectors and computational technologies provide new
opportunities for applied research and the fundamental sciences. Concurrently,
dramatic increases in the three Vs (Volume, Velocity, and Variety) of
experimental data and the scale of computational tasks produced the demand for
new real-time processing systems at experimental facilities. Recently, this
demand was addressed by the Spark-MPI approach connecting the Spark
data-intensive platform with the MPI high-performance framework. In contrast
with existing data management and analytics systems, Spark introduced a new
middleware based on resilient distributed datasets (RDDs), which decoupled
various data sources from high-level processing algorithms. The RDD middleware
significantly advanced the scope of data-intensive applications, spreading from
SQL queries to machine learning to graph processing. Spark-MPI further extended
the Spark ecosystem with the MPI applications using the Process Management
Interface. The paper explores this integrated platform within the context of
online ptychographic and tomographic reconstruction pipelines.Comment: New York Scientific Data Summit, August 6-9, 201
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