23,048 research outputs found

    Quantum-mechanical communication theory

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    Optimum signal reception using quantum-mechanical communication theor

    A 1.6 Gb/s, 3 mW CMOS receiver for optical communication

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    A 1.6 Gb/s receiver for optical communication has been designed and fabricated in a 0.25-ÎĽm CMOS process. This receiver has no transimpedance amplifier and uses the parasitic capacitor of the flip-chip bonded photodetector as an integrating element and resolves the data with a double-sampling technique. A simple feedback loop adjusts a bias current to the average optical signal, which essentially "AC couples" the input. The resulting receiver resolves an 11 ÎĽA input, dissipates 3 mW of power, occupies 80 ÎĽm x 50 ÎĽm of area and operates at over 1.6 Gb/s

    Venture capital support to small businesses

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    Supplementary Appendices 1-3 to report published by National Audit Office (HC: 23, 2009-10; ISBN: 9780102963304)This report looks at the Department’s programme of venture capital funds which 2 support small businesses seeking equity based finance. The scope of the report does not include Government provision of debt finance or tax incentives for small businesses, nor does it attempt to look in detail at “investment readiness” programmes within Government which assist small businesses in preparing their business plans so that they can pitch their propositions to investors more effectively.The National Audit Office commissioned Professor Gordon Murray supported by Dr Louis Liu of Exeter University to undertake a data collection exercise to allow the National Audit Office to understand the extent of publicly sponsored venture capital programmes in other countries

    First Experimental Demonstration of Gate-all-around III-V MOSFET by Top-down Approach

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    The first inversion-mode gate-all-around (GAA) III-V MOSFETs are experimentally demonstrated with a high mobility In0.53Ga0.47As channel and atomic-layer-deposited (ALD) Al2O3/WN gate stacks by a top-down approach. A well-controlled InGaAs nanowire release process and a novel ALD high-k/metal gate process has been developed to enable the fabrication of III-V GAA MOSFETs. Well-behaved on-state and off-state performance has been achieved with channel length (Lch) down to 50nm. A detailed scaling metrics study (S.S., DIBL, VT) with Lch of 50nm - 110nm and fin width (WFin) of 30nm - 50nm are carried out, showing the immunity to short channel effects with the advanced 3D structure. The GAA structure has provided a viable path towards ultimate scaling of III-V MOSFETs.Comment: IEEE IEDM 2011 pp. 769-772; Structures are valuable for low-dimensional physics stud

    Stochastic Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: A Simultaneous Marginal-Effect Approach

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    AbstractObjectiveThe purpose of this study is to develop a cost-effectiveness methodology in the context of a simultaneous modeling framework that provides consistent point and interval estimates.MethodsA simultaneous model of cost and effectiveness functions was developed to measure the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for competing medical interventions. A feasible nonlinear least-squares method was suggested to estimate the simultaneous model. Using a series of hypothetical data, a simulation analysis was performed to show the superior performance of the proposed model, relative to the average-effect model, a widely used approach to cost-effectiveness estimation.ResultsThe traditional average-effect approach has two shortcomings. First, it assumes two strong conditions: truly random distributions of all the significant nontreatment variables (both observed and unobserved) across study groups, and the independence of cost and effectiveness variables. Second, it does not give the confidence interval, an important measure to assess the stochastic nature and robustness of point estimates. In contrast, the simultaneous modeling approach provides marginal-effect estimates, imposing no restrictions on the random distributions of the individual characteristics across study groups. Furthermore, it takes into account the simultaneity of cost and effectiveness functions being estimated. The simulation analysis showed that the simultaneous modeling approach is significantly more unbiased and efficient in predicting the true cost-effectiveness ratio.ConclusionThe simultaneous modeling approach is superior to the average-effect approach in the estimation of incremental cost-effectiveness ratios using data with significant nontreatment confounding factors. The advantages of the simultaneous modeling approach are particularly appealing for evaluative studies dealing with large-scale retrospective data at the patient level
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