5 research outputs found

    Solid State Circuits Technologies

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    The evolution of solid-state circuit technology has a long history within a relatively short period of time. This technology has lead to the modern information society that connects us and tools, a large market, and many types of products and applications. The solid-state circuit technology continuously evolves via breakthroughs and improvements every year. This book is devoted to review and present novel approaches for some of the main issues involved in this exciting and vigorous technology. The book is composed of 22 chapters, written by authors coming from 30 different institutions located in 12 different countries throughout the Americas, Asia and Europe. Thus, reflecting the wide international contribution to the book. The broad range of subjects presented in the book offers a general overview of the main issues in modern solid-state circuit technology. Furthermore, the book offers an in depth analysis on specific subjects for specialists. We believe the book is of great scientific and educational value for many readers. I am profoundly indebted to the support provided by all of those involved in the work. First and foremost I would like to acknowledge and thank the authors who worked hard and generously agreed to share their results and knowledge. Second I would like to express my gratitude to the Intech team that invited me to edit the book and give me their full support and a fruitful experience while working together to combine this book

    Performance and cost analysis of NoC-inspired virtual topologies for digital microfluidic biochips

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    Virtual topologies simply the process of compiling assays to execute on digital microfluidic biochips (DMFBs). This paper evaluates the performance and cost of a virtual topology inspired by networks-on-chip (NoCs). The throughput of several deadlock-free droplet routing protocols is compared on synthetic traffic patterns that are widely used to evaluate semiconductor NoCs. The cost is the number of control pins required for actuation and the number of PCB layers required to route the chip; by eliminating unused pins, the virtual topology is cheaper than a direct-addressing DMFB, especially as chip size increases
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