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The conference is financially supported by the above industry partners.
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Tutorials
Monday, May 19, 10:30 - 12:00
TUTORIAL A: Recent Progress in Carbon Based-Nanomaterials in Electronic Devices
Ahalapitiya H. Jayatissa (Jay)
Mechnical, Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, The University of Toledo, Ohio.
Recently, carbon nanostructures, such as buckyballs, nanotubes, diamond,
and graphene have attracted wide attention among scientific community
because of their numerous possible applications in electronics and other
industries. At present, carbon nanotubes have been investigated as an electronic
material, photonic materials, mechanical material, and conductive materials.
All of these applications indicated that carbon nanotubes have wonderful
properties relevant to any of these advanced device requirements.
Processing of nanostructure carbon, such as modification, manipulation,
and doping of these nanotubes result in target properties. Therefore, processing
of nanostructure carbon became really a complicated subject. Recent development
of carbon based materials reaches to the selection of graphene as the
next generation electronic device material. In this tutorial, wide range
of materials, devices, and properties of nanostructure carbon will be
reviewed based on recent literature. Also, possible applications and
other opportunities related to carbon materials will be discussed.
Ahalapitiya H. Jayatissa (Jay) is an Assistant Professor in Mechnical, Industrial,
and Manufacturing Engineering at The University of Toledo (UT), Ohio.
He received his MPhil (Photonics) and PhD (EE) degrees from the
University of Ruhuna in 1991 and Shizuoka University in 1995,
respectively. After graduation, he had obtained postdoctoral research
experience at the Research Institute of Electronics at Shizuoka University,
and Imaging Device Division at NHK Research Laboratory in Japan. He also
worked at Materials and Chemistry Divisions in Argonne National Laboratory.
His current research includes synthesis of carbon nanotubes and application
of carbon nanotubes in gas sensors and piezoresistance devices. He was
awarded the Faculty Early Career award from National Science Foundation in
2003. He has authored/coauthored more than 40 refereed papers and 42 proceedings.
He is a senior member of IEEE and SME societies.
TUTORIAL B: High Performance Inverters for Alternative Energy Systems
Sudip K. Mazumder, University of Illinois at Chicago
TUTORIAL C: Security in Embedded Systems
Mahadevan Gomathisankaran, Princeton University
This tutorial will provide a broad overview of the research issues
involved in Embedded Systems security domain. The topics we will touch upon are:
- Hardware-based secure program execution,
- Cryptographic components and processing overhead,
- Types of attacks on embedded systems (Physical Invasive, Side-Channel),
- Physically unclonable functions,
- Watermarking of IPs,
- FPGA security,
- Passive and active metering for prevention of piracy,
- Emerging threats and technologies.
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