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Prismatic supercaps + rf cans for thin bidirectional supercap backup demo with ltc3110 :)

Reddit:Electronics - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 19:16
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Made this a few months back. I thought this was a neat way of packaging the two prismatic caps for a flat high power density package.

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Finwave and GlobalFoundries agree technology development and licensing deal

Semiconductor today - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 17:42
Finwave Semiconductor Inc of Waltham, MA, USA has announced a strategic technology development and licensing agreement with GlobalFoundries (GF) of Malta, NY, USA...

Antenna subsystem employs beamforming IC

EDN Network - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 16:18

Taoglas and MixComm are co-developing a 5G NR mmWave antenna subsystem that covers a frequency band of 26.5 GHz to 29.5 GHz. The Taoglas KHA16.24C smart antenna subsystem leverages MixComm’s Summit 2629 beamforming front-end IC. This subsystem enables the integration of 5G NR devices for infrastructure applications, such as small cells, repeaters, and customer-premise equipment.

The KHA16.24C features a 2D antenna array integrated into a multilayer PCB, encompassing RFICs and 16 antenna elements within a 53×84-mm footprint. The design includes layers for power optimization, thermal control, digital control, and RF feed lines. It is scalable, with the capability to support arrays of up to 1024 elements depending on the implementation.

MixComm’s Summit 2629 beamforming front-end IC integrates power amplifiers, low noise amplifiers, and an all-passive beamformer, optimized for 5G infrastructure. Its transmitter/receiver array consists of four elements, each capable of handling dual polarizations. Fabricated on GlobalFoundries’ 45RFSOI, the Summit 2629 includes on-chip temperature and power sensing.

“We are excited to showcase our advanced mmWave smart antenna subsystem together with MixComm,” said Dennis Kish, COO of Taoglas. “The 5G NR mmWave market is starting to emerge globally. Our high-performance and cost-competitive subsystem will help solidify a broader and faster deployment of the technology.”

Contact Taoglas for more information, to receive a quote, or order samples.

Taoglas

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Hybrid module boosts solar power

EDN Network - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 16:18

onsemi’s Si/SiC hybrid power integrated module (PIM) increases the power output of utility-scale solar string inverters and energy storage systems. Compared to previous generations, the new F5BP-packaged PIM delivers greater power density and improved efficiency within the same footprint, raising the total system power of a solar inverter from 300 kW to 350 kW.

The F5BP-PIM is a flying capacitor boost module that pairs 1000-V, 500-A Field Stop 7 IGBTs with 1200-V, 120-A SiC diodes. FS7 IGBTs reduce turn-off losses and switching losses by up to 8%, while the SiC diodes enhance switching performance and decrease voltage flicker by 15% compared to previous generations.

Featuring an optimized electrical layout and advanced Direct Bonded Copper (DBC) substrates, these modules minimize stray inductance and thermal resistance. A copper baseplate further reduces thermal resistance to the heat sink by 9.3%, ensuring effective cooling under high loads. This robust thermal management maintains efficiency and longevity, making the modules well-suited for demanding applications requiring reliable and sustained power delivery.

To learn more about the NXH500B100H7F5SHG F5BP-PIM, click here.

onsemi

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Ideal diodes reduce power loss

EDN Network - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 16:18

Nexperia’s NID5100 and NID5100-Q100 ideal diodes provide a lower forward voltage drop than conventional diodes in power OR-ing applications. The NID5100 targets standard industrial and consumer applications, while the NID5100-Q100 is qualified for automotive use.

These PMOS-based devices integrate a MOSFET that regulates the anode-to-cathode voltage to be 8 to 10 times lower than that of similarly rated Schottky diodes. Additionally, the ideal diodes reduce reverse DC leakage current by up to 100 times compared to typical Schottky diodes.

In addition to automatic transitioning between OR-ed power supplies, Nexperia’s ideal diodes provide forward voltage regulation with a typical value of 31 mV and can handle forward currents up to 1.5 A. They operate over a voltage range of 1.2 V to 5.5 V with low current consumption. At 3.3 VIN, shutdown current is just 170 nA, and quiescent current is 240 nA. The devices also feature reverse voltage protection with an absolute maximum rating of -6 V.

The NID5100 and NID5100-Q100 are supplied in small TSSP6/SOT363-2 leaded plastic packages with dimensions of 2.1×1.25×0.95 mm. They can be purchased through Nexperia’s distributor network.

NID5100 product page

Nexperia

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Miniature MLCCs maintain high stability

EDN Network - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 16:18

MLCCs in Kyocera AVX’s KGU series use a Class 1 C0G (NP0) ceramic dielectric, ensuring stable operation across a wide temperature range. Offered in four miniature chip sizes, these capacitors have a temperature coefficient of capacitance (TCC) of 0 ±30 ppm/°C and exhibit virtually no voltage coefficient.

KGU series MLCCs come in EIA 01005, 0402, 0603, and 0805 chip sizes, with rated voltages ranging from 16 V to 250 V and capacitances from 0.1 pF to 100 pF. These components offer tolerances as tight as ±0.05 pF and operate across a temperature range of -40°C to +125°C. According to the manufacturer, the KGU parts also provide ultra-low ESR, high power, high Q, and self-resonant frequencies.

Optimized for communications, these capacitors are suitable for filter networks, high-Q frequency sources, coupling, and DC blocking circuits. They can be used in cellular base stations, Wi-Fi networks, wireless devices, as well as broadband wireless, satellite communications, and public safety radio systems.

KGU series capacitors are available through Kyocera AVX’s distributor network, including DigiKey, Mouser, and Richardson RFPD.

KGU series product page

Kyocera AVX 

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Automotive LDO packs watchdog timer

EDN Network - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 16:17

Nisshinbo’s NP4271 LDO regulator features a high-precision watchdog timer and reset functions through window-type output voltage monitoring. Designed for automotive functional safety, the series meets the need for external MCU monitoring and reliable voltage-based reset functions in electronic control units (ECUs).

The LDO operates across a broad input voltage range of 4.0 V to 40 V and offers two output voltage options of 3.3 V or 5.0 V. Output voltage is accurate to within ±2.0% over a range of conditions, including input voltages from 6 V to 40 V, load currents from 5 mA to 500 mA, and temperatures ranging from -40°C to +125°C.

Two reset function options are available based on output voltage monitoring. Version A monitors both the low and high sides, while Version B monitors only the low side. Detection voltage accuracy is ±2.0% for the low side and ±5.0% for the high side, across the full temperature range. Additionally, the NP4271 provides high timing accuracy for both watchdog timer monitoring and reset times.

The NP4271 automotive LDO regulator is available through Nisshinbo authorized distributors, including DigiKey and Mouser.

NP4271 product page

Nisshinbo Micro Devices 

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PQC algorithms: Security of the future is ready for the present

EDN Network - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 15:42

Quantum computing technology is developing rapidly, promising to solve many of society’s most intractable problems. However, as researchers race to build quantum computers that would operate in radically different ways from ordinary computers, some experts predict that quantum computers could break the current encryption that provides security and privacy for just about everything we do online.

Encryption—which protects countless electronic secrets, such as the contents of email messages, medical records, and photo libraries—carries a heavy load in modern digitized society. It does that by encrypting data sent across public computer networks so that it’s unreadable to all but the sender and intended recipient.

However, far more powerful quantum computers would be able to break the traditional public-key cryptographic algorithms, such as RSA and elliptic curve cryptography, that we use in our everyday lives. So, the need to secure the quantum future has unleashed a new wave of cryptographic innovation, making the post-quantum cryptography (PQC) a new cybersecurity benchmark.

Enter the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the U.S. agency that has rallied the world’s cryptography experts to conceive, submit, and then evaluate cryptographic algorithms that could resist the assault of quantum computers. NIST started the PQC standardization process back in 2016 by seeking ideas from cryptographers and then asked them for additional algorithms in 2022.

Three PQC standards

On 13 August 2024, NIST announced the completion of three standards as primary tools for general encryption and protecting digital signatures. “We encourage system administrators to start integrating them into their systems immediately, because full integration will take time,” said Dustin Moody, NIST mathematician and the head of the PQC standardization project.

Figure 1 The new PQC standards are designed for two essential tasks: general encryption to protect information exchanged across a public network and digital signatures for identity authentication. Source: NIST

Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 203, primarily tasked for encryption, features smaller encryption keys that two parties can exchange easily at a faster speed. FIPS 203 is based on the CRYSTALS-Kyber algorithm, which has been renamed ML-KEM, short for Module-Lattice-Based Key-Encapsulation Mechanism.

FIPS 204, primarily designed for protecting digital signatures, uses the CRYSTALS-Dilithium algorithm, which has been renamed ML-DSA, short for Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Algorithm. FIPS 205, also intended for digital signatures, employs the Sphincs+ algorithm, which has been renamed SLH-DSA, short for Stateless Hash-Based Digital Signature Algorithm.

PQC standards implementation

Xiphera, a supplier of cryptographic IP cores, has already started updating its xQlave family of security IPs by incorporating ML-KEM (Kyber) for key encapsulation mechanism and ML-DSA (Dilithium) for digital signatures according to the final versions of the NIST standards.

“We are updating our xQlave PQC IP cores within Q3 of 2024 to comply with these final standard versions,” said Kimmo Järvinen, co-founder and CTO of Xiphera. “The update will be minor, as we already support earlier versions of the algorithms in xQlave products as of 2023 and have been following very carefully the standardisation progress and related discussions within the cryptographic community.”

Xiphera has also incorporated a quantum-resistant secure boot in its nQrux family of hardware trust engines. The nQrux secure boot is based on pure digital logic and does not include any hidden software components, which bolsters security and ensures easier validation and certification.

The nQrux secure boot uses a hybrid signature scheme comprising Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA), a traditional scheme, and the new quantum-secure signature scheme, ML-DSA, both standardized by NIST. The solution will ensure system security even if quantum computers break ECDSA, or if a weakness is identified in the new ML-DSA standard.

Figure 2 The hybrid system combines a classical cryptographic algorithm with a new quantum-secure signature scheme. Source: Xiphera

The nQrux secure boot, a process node agnostic IP core, can be easily integrated across FPGA and ASIC architectures. Xiphera plans to make this IP core available for customer evaluations in the fourth quarter of 2024.

PQC standards in RISC-V

Next, RISC-V processor IP supplier SiFive has teamed up with quantum-safe cryptography provider PQShield to accelerate the adoption of NIST’s PQC standards on RISC-V technologies. This will allow designers leveraging SiFive’s RISC-V processors to build chips that comply with NIST’s recently published PQC standards.

SiFive will integrate PQShield’s PQPlatform-CoPro security IP in its RISC-V processors to establish a quantum-resistant hardware root-of-trust and thus build a foundation of a secure system. “This collaboration ensures that designers of RISC-V vector extensions will be working with the latest generation of cybersecurity,” said Yann Loisel, principal security architect at SiFive.

Figure 3 PQPlatform-CoPro adds post-quantum cryptography (PQC) to a security sub-system. Source: PQShield

The partnership will also allow PQShield’s cryptographic libraries to utilize RISC-V vector extensions for the first time. On the other hand, RISC-V processors will incorporate a brand-new security technology with a greater level of protection and trust.

No wait for backup standards

Powerful quantum computers are soon expected to be able to easily crack the current encryption standards used to protect software and hardware applications. So, as the above announcements show, hardware and software makers are starting to migrate their semiconductor products to PQC technologies in line with NIST’s new standards for post-quantum cryptography.

While NIST continues to evaluate two other sets of algorithms that could one day serve as backup standards, NIST’s Moody says there is no need to wait for future standards. “Go ahead and start using these three. We need to be prepared in case of an attack that defeats the algorithms in these three standards, and we will continue working on backup plans to keep our data safe. But for most applications, these new standards are the main event.”

It’s important to note that while these PQC algorithms are implemented on traditional computational platforms, they can withstand both traditional and quantum attacks. That’s a vital consideration for long-lifecycle applications in automotive and industrial designs.

Moreover, the landscape of cryptography and cybersecurity will continue shifting amid the ascent of powerful quantum computers capable of breaking the traditional public-key cryptographic algorithms. That poses an imminent threat to the security foundations of global networks and data infrastructures.

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Latest issue of Semiconductor Today now available

Semiconductor today - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 12:26
For coverage of all the key business and technology developments in compound semiconductors and advanced silicon materials and devices over the last month, subscribe to Semiconductor Today magazine...

ROHM’s 4th Generation SiC MOSFET Bare Chips Adopted in Three EV Models of ZEEKR from Geely

ELE Times - Fri, 08/30/2024 - 08:33

Integration in traction inverters extends the cruising range and improves performance

ROHM has announced the adoption of power modules equipped with 4th generation SiC MOSFET bare chips for the traction inverters in three models of ZEEKR EV brand from Zhejiang Geely Holding Group (Geely), a top 10 global automaker. Since 2023, these power modules have been mass-produced and shipped from HAIMOSIC (SHANGHAI) Co., Ltd. – a joint venture between ROHM and Zhenghai Group Co., Ltd. to Viridi E-Mobility Technology (Ningbo) Co., Ltd, a Tier 1 manufacturer under Geely.

Geely and ROHM have been collaborating since 2018, beginning with technical exchanges, then later forming a strategic partnership focused on SiC power devices in 2021. This led to the integration of ROHM’s SiC MOSFETs into the traction inverters of three models: the ZEEKR X, 009, and 001. In each of these EVs, ROHM’s power solutions centered on SiC MOSFETs play a key role in extending the cruising range and enhancing overall performance.

ROHM is committed to advancing SiC technology, with plans to launch 5th generation SiC MOSFETs in 2025 while accelerating market introduction of 6th and 7th generation devices. What’s more, by offering SiC in various forms, including bare chips, discrete components, and modules, ROHM is able to promote the widespread adoption of SiC technology, contributing to the creation of a sustainable society.

ZEEKR Models Equipped with ROHM’s EcoSiC

The ZEEKR X, which features a maximum output exceeding 300kW and cruising range of more than 400km despite being a compact SUV, is attracting attention even outside of China due to its exceptional cost performance. The 009 minivan features an intelligent cockpit and large 140kWh battery, achieving an outstanding maximum cruising range of 822km. And for those looking for superior performance, the flagship model, 001, offers a maximum output of over 400kW from dual motors with a range of over 580km along with a four-wheel independent control system.

Market Background and ROHM’s EcoSiC

In recent years, there has been a push to develop more compact, efficient, lightweight electric systems to expand the adoption of next-generation electric vehicles (xEVs) and achieve environmental goals such as carbon neutrality. For electric vehicles in particular, improving the efficiency of the traction inverter, a key element of the drive system, is crucial for extending the cruising range and reducing the size of the onboard battery, heightening expectations for SiC power devices.

As the world’s first supplier to begin mass production of SiC MOSFETs in 2010, ROHM continues to lead the industry in SiC device technology development. These devices are now marketed under the EcoSiC brand, encompassing a comprehensive lineup that includes bare chips, discrete components, and modules.

EcoSiC Brand

EcoSiC is a brand of devices that utilize silicon carbide (SiC), which is attracting attention in the power device field for performance that surpasses silicon (Si). ROHM independently develops technologies essential for the evolution of SiC, from wafer fabrication and production processes to packaging, and quality control methods. At the same time, we have established an integrated production system throughout the manufacturing process, solidifying our position as a leading SiC supplier.

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Cornell and Lit Thinking working on DARPA-funded project to develop AlN-based PiN diodes with low on-state resistance

Semiconductor today - Thu, 08/29/2024 - 15:13
Aided by a grant from the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), researchers at Cornell University – in collaboration with Lit Thinking of Orlando, FL, US – are working to overcome some of the key technical challenges that have limited the widespread adoption of aluminium nitride (AlN) as a next-generation semiconductor material...

Beaming solar power to Earth: feasible or fantasy?

EDN Network - Thu, 08/29/2024 - 14:00

It’s always interesting when we are presented with very different and knowledgeable perspectives about the feasibility of a proposed technological advance. I recently had this experience when I saw two sets of articles about the same highly advanced concept within a short time window, but with completely different assessments of their viability.

In this case, the concept is simple and has been around for a long time in science fiction and speculative stories: capture gigawatts of solar energy using orbiting structures (I hesitate to call them satellites) and then beam that energy down to Earth.

The concept has been written about for decades, is simple to describe in principle, and appears to offer many benefits with few downsides. In brief, the plan is to use huge solar panels to intercept some of the vast solar energy impinging on Earth, convert it to electricity, and then beam the resultant electrical energy to ground-based stations from where it could be distributed to users. In theory, this would be a nearly environmentally “painless” source of free energy. What’s not to like?

It’s actually more than just an “on paper” or speculative concept. There are several serious projects underway, including one at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) which is building a very small-scale version of some of the needed components. They have been performing ground-based tests and have even launched some elements in orbit for in-pace evaluation in January 2023 (“In a First, Caltech’s Space Solar Power Demonstrator Wirelessly Transmits Power in Space”). The Wall Street Journal even had an upbeat article about it, “Beaming Solar Energy From Space Gets a Step Closer”.

There are many technical advances to be resolved in the real world (actually, they are “out of this world”) issues that have to be addressed. Note that the Caltech project is funded thus far by a $100 million grant, all from a single benefactor.

The Caltech Space Solar Power Project launched their Space Solar Power Demonstrator (SSPD) to test several key components of an ambitious plan to harvest solar power in space and beam the energy back to Earth. In brief, it consists of three main experiments, each tasked with testing a different key technology of the project, Figure 1.

Figure 1 Caltech’s Space Solar Power Demonstrator from their Space Solar Power Project has three key subsystems, encompassing structure, solar cells, and power transfer. Source: Caltech

The three segments are:

  • Deployable on-Orbit ultraLight Composite Experiment (DOLCE): A structure measuring 6 feet by 6 feet that demonstrates the architecture, packaging scheme and deployment mechanisms of the modular spacecraft that would eventually make up a kilometer-scale constellation forming a power station, Figure 2;

Figure 2 Engineers carefully lower the DOLCE portion of the Space Solar Power Demonstrator onto the Vigoride spacecraft built by Momentus. Source: Caltech

  • ALBA: A collection of 32 different types of photovoltaic (PV) cells, to enable an assessment of the types of cells that are the most effective in the punishing environment of space;
  • Microwave Array for Power-transfer Low-orbit Experiment (MAPLE): An array of flexible lightweight microwave power transmitters with precise timing control focusing the power selectively on two different receivers to demonstrate wireless power transmission at distance in space.

Scaling a demonstration unit up to useable size is a major undertaking. The researchers envision the system as being designed and built as a highly modular, building-block architecture. Each spacecraft will carry a square-shaped membrane measuring roughly 200 feet on each side. The membrane is made up of hundreds or thousands of smaller units which have PV cells embedded on one side and a microwave transmitter on the other.

Each spacecraft would operate and maneuver in space on its own but also possess the ability to hover in formation and configure an orbiting power station spanning several kilometers with the potential to produce about 1.5 gigawatts of continuous power. A phased-array antenna would aim the 10-GHz power beam to a surface zone about five kilometers in diameter.

The concept is certainly ambitious. Perhaps most challenging is the very harsh reality that scaling up power-related projects from a small-scale bench-size demonstration unit to full-scale functioning system is a highly nonlinear process. This applies the battery storage systems, solar and wind energy harvesting, and other sources.

Experience shows that there’s an exponential increase in difficulties and issues as physical size and power levels; the only question is “what is that exponent value?” Still, the concept makes sense and seems so straightforward; we just have to keep moving the technology along and we’ll get there, right?

I was almost convinced, but then I saw a strong counterargument in an article in the June 2024 issue of IEEE Spectrum (“A Skeptic’s Take on Beaming Power to Earth from Space”). The article’s author, Henri Barde, joined the European Space Agency in 2007 and served as head of the power systems, electromagnetic compatibility, and space environment division until his retirement in 2017; he has worked in the space industry for nearly 30 years and has reality-based insight.

He looked at various proposed and distinctly different approaches to capturing and beaming the power, including CASSIOPeiA from Space Solar Holdings Group; SPS-ALPHA Mark-III from a former NASA physicist; Solar Power Satellite from Thales Alenia Space; and MR-SPS from the China Academy of Space Technology (there’s a brief mention of the Caltech project as well).

He discusses key attributes, presumed benefits, and most importantly, the real obstacles to success as well the dollar and technical cost to overcoming those obstacles—assuming they can be overcome. These include the hundreds, if not thousands, of launches needed to get everything “up there”; the need for robotic in-space assembly and repair; fuel for station-keeping at the desired low earth orbit (LEO), medium earth orbit (MEO), or geostationary orbit (GEO); temperature extremes (there will be periods when satellites are in the dark) and associated  flexing; impacts from thousands of micrometeorites; electronic components capable of handling megawatts in space (none of which presently exist), and many more.

His conclusion is simple: it’s a major waste of resources that could be better spent on improved renewable power sources, storage, and grid on Earth. The problem he points out is that beamed solar power is such an enticing concept. It’s so elegant in concept and seems to solve the energy problem so cleanly and crisply, once you figure it out.

So now I am perplexed. The sobering reality described in Barde’s “downer” article wiped out the enthusiasm I was developing for these projects such as the one at Caltech. At some point, the $100 million seed money (and similar at other projects) will need to be supplemented by more money, and lots of it (easily, trillions), to take any of these ideas to their conclusion, while there will be substantial risk.

Is beamed solar power one of those attractive ideas that is actually impractical, impossible, too risky, and too costly when it meets reality of physics, electronics, space, and more? Do we need to keep pushing it to see where it can take us?

Or will the spigot of money as well as the personal energy of its proponents eventually dry up, since it is not a project that you can do part way? After all, with a project like this one, you’re either all in or you are all out.

I know that when it comes to the paths that technology advances take, you should “never say never.” So, check back in a few decades, and we’ll see where things stand.

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References

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ROHM’s fourth-generation SiC MOSFET chips adopted in three Geely ZEEKR EV models

Semiconductor today - Thu, 08/29/2024 - 13:28
Japan-based power semiconductor device maker ROHM Co Ltd says that power modules equipped with 4th-generation silicon carbide (SiC) MOSFET bare chips have been adopted for the traction inverters in three models of the ZEEKR electric vehicle (EV) brand of China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Group. Since 2023, these power modules have been mass produced and shipped from HAIMOSIC (SHANGHAI) Co Ltd – a joint venture between ROHM and Zhenghai Group Co Ltd – to Viridi E-Mobility Technology (Ningbo) Co Ltd, a tier-1 manufacturer under Geely...

Олександр Мирончук. Тут народжується майбутнє

Новини - Thu, 08/29/2024 - 11:22
Олександр Мирончук. Тут народжується майбутнє
Image
Інформація КП чт, 08/29/2024 - 11:22
Текст

Лідер технічної освіти України – КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського активно співпрацює із зовнішніми партнерами з метою оновлення навчально-лабораторної бази та впроваджує освітні програми, адаптовані до запитів ринку праці і високотехнологічного бізнесу. Уже кілька років на РТФ працює лабораторія "Datacom", обладнана потужним сучасним обладнанням Huawei. Навчатися в ній можуть не лише студенти-радіотехніки, а й КПІшники з інших факультетів.

EPC Space unveils dynamic cross-reference tool for rad-hard MOSFET device replacement

Semiconductor today - Thu, 08/29/2024 - 10:23
EPC Space LLC of Haverhill, MA, USA (which provides high-reliability radiation-hardened enhancement-mode gallium nitride-on-silicon transistors and ICs for power management in space and other harsh environments) has launched the Cross Reference Tool. Designed to streamline the search and replacement process for rad-hard MOSFET devices up to 350V, the tool makes it easier for users to find and replace any competitor’s rad-hard MOSFET device by simply typing in the part number...

Coherent unveils CW DFB InP lasers for silicon photonics transceivers

Semiconductor today - Thu, 08/29/2024 - 10:15
Materials, networking and laser technology firm Coherent Corp of Saxonburg, PA, USA has launched new family of high-efficiency continuous wave (CW) distributed feedback (DFB) lasers specifically engineered for silicon photonics transceiver modules...

🔔 Сесія професорсько-викладацького складу КПІ

Новини - Wed, 08/28/2024 - 17:53
🔔 Сесія професорсько-викладацького складу КПІ kpi ср, 08/28/2024 - 17:53
Текст

29 серпня відбудеться сесія професорсько-викладацького складу КПІ у змішаному форматі.

📍Урочисте засідання пройде за участі деканів факультетів, директорів навчально-наукових інститутів, завідувачів кафедр у залі засідань Вченої ради університету.

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