2005 MTT-S FULL PROG.
Transcription
2005 MTT-S FULL PROG.
IMS 2005 2005 IEEE MTT-S INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM Long Beach, CA • June 12–17, 2005 R www.ims2005.org RFIC A F T G IMS 2005 SYMPOSIUM WEEK AT A GLANCE IMS Activity Location Tutorials Workshops Plenary Session Technical Sessions Interactive Forum Panel Sessions LBCC & Hyatt LBCC & Hyatt LBCC LBCC LBCC Hyatt EXHIBITS Exhibition µAPS LBCC LBCC RFIC LBCC & Hyatt LBCC LBCC LBCC & Hyatt LBCC Workshops Plenary Session Technical Sessions Panel Sessions Interactive Forum ARFTG Conference Exhibits Renaissance Renaissance SOCIAL LBCC LBCC Aquarium of the Pacific Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Renaissance Renaissance Hyatt Hyatt MTT Member Breakfast RFIC Reception MJ Reception Industry Reception MTT Awards Banquet Student Awards Luncheon Speakers Breakfast ARFTG Breakfast ARFTG Awards Lunch WIE Reception Ham Radio Social SUN/12 M N A MON/13 E M N A TUE/14 E M N A WED/15 E M N A THU/16 E M N A FRI/17 E M N A E IEEE MTT-S INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM 2005/MICROWAVE WEEK MORNING 8:00–9:40 AM LUNCHTIME 12:00–1:15 PM 10:10–11:50 AM AFTERNOON 1:20–3:00 PM Sat., June 11, 2005 EVENING 3:30–5:10 PM Registration 2 to 6 PM Sunday, June 12, 2005 Registration 7 AM to 6 PM TSA: Filter I: RF and Microwave Filter Design TSB: Basic RFIC Building Blocks TSC: Monolithic Distributed Power Management for Next Generation Wireless Applications WSA: Competitiveness of Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) Systems WSB: Full CMOS Radio WSC: Advanced Technologies for Next Generation RFICs WSD: Advanced System Solutions and Integration Technologies WSE: Impact of Component Modeling on Microwave … WSH: Noise Shaping Methods for RFIC Design WSF: Accuracy of System-level Figures of Merit … WSI: On-wafer Microwave Measurements: … WSG: Circuit Characterization, Modeling and Testing: … WSJ: Practical Implementation of RF Power Amplifiers … WSK: Design Considerations and Tools for the System Level Design of RFICs WSL: Multi-band Multi-mode RFICs RFIC Plenary Session 5:30 to 7 PM LBCC RFIC Reception 7 to 9 PM LBCC Monday, June 13, 2005 Registration 7 AM to 5 PM RFIC Symposium 8 AM to 5 PM TMA: EMI/EMC Fundamentals for RF/MW Engineers WMA: Application and Technology of High Speed Analog to Digital Converters WMB: Filter II: Practical Aspects of Microwave Filter Design and Realization WMC: Advances in RF Power Amplifiers: Modeling, Design and Linearization WMD: Terahertz Radiation: Technology, Applications and Measurement Methods WME: AM Noise in Modern Receivers WMI: New Developments in Low Noise Frequency Sources WMF: Packaging and Interconnects for Microwave Photonics Applications WMJ: Low Cost Packaging for Microwave and mm-wave Products PMA: CMOS PAs Step on the GaAs! WMG: Liquid Crystal Polymers for Microwave and mm-wave Packaging WMK: Technology and Implementation of High Speed/GHz Digital … WMH: High Frequency Digital Backplane Interconnect … Tuesday, June 14, 2005 Registration 7 AM to 5 PM RFIC Symposium 8 AM to 5 PM IMS Exhibition 9 AM to 5 PM • µAPS 9 AM to 4:30 PM TU1A: Radio Over Fiber: Devices, Techniques and Systems TU1B: Frequency Conversion and Control Circuits TU1C: Frequency Domain Numerical Techiques TU1D: Silicon and GaAs Based Novel Amplifiers and Mixers TU1E: Filter Theory and Synthesis Techniques PTUA: 3G Handsets – Too Much Power in Your Hands? PTUB: Outsourcing: The Impact on the Microwave Industry TU2A: Plenary Session PTUC: RF/Microwave/mm-wave Applications of Metamaterials RTUIF: INTERACTIVE FORUM 1:30 TO 4:30 PM TU3A: Sensors and Sensor Systems TU4A: Filter Design and Implementation TU3B: Hot Carrier Effects and Mixer TU4B: Microwave Component Technology Miniaturization, Performance Optimization, Size Reduction and Emerging Technology TU3C: Advances in Time Domain TU4C: New Applications of Modeling Time Domain Methods TU3D: FBAR Filters for Cellular TU4D: Microwave Magnetic Phone (FS) Devices TU3E: Memorial Session for Don TU4E: Distributed RF Sensor Parker (SS) Communication (FS) Microwave Journal/ MTT-S Reception 6 to 8 PM Aquarium of the Pacific Women in Engineering Reception 5:30 to 7 PM Hyatt Education Forum 6 to 8 PM Hyatt Ham Radio Social 6 to 9 PM Hyatt Wednesday, June 15, 2005 Registration 7 AM to 5 PM IMS Exhibition 9 AM to 5 PM • µAPS 9 AM to 4:50 PM WE1A: Phased Arrays and Retrodirective Systems WE1B: Microwave Acoustic Devices WE1C: Components and Technologies for THz Applications WE1D: Non-linear Device Modeling WE2A: Smart Antennas and Beamforming Techniques WE2B: Tunable Dielectric Materials and Devices WE2C: Terahertz Imaging (FS) WE2D: A Tribute to Harold Sobol PWA: CAD Tools for Microwave IC Design PWB: Trends for Future Deep Space Exploration (SS) WE1E: High Power GaN Devices WE1F: Bandstop and Dual Resonator Filters WE1G: Baluns and Transmission Structures PWC: Venture Capital and Entrepreneurial Opportunities in Microwaves WE2E: Power Amplifiers for Wireless Applications WE2F: Ultra Wideband and Extended Stopband Filters WE2G: Novel Components WEIF: INTERACTIVE FORUM 1:30 TO 4:30 PM WE3A: Advances in Wireless WE4A: Future Technologies for Subsystem Technologies MW/mm-wave Applications (SS) WE3B: MEMS Device Technology WE4B: MEMS Component Technology WE3C: Tunable and Active Filters WE4C: Planar Dual Mode Filters WE3D: Advances in Nonlinear Simulation Techniques WE3E: Advanced Technologies for Power Amplifiers WE3F: Advanced Packaging Materials and Applications I WE3G: Analysis and App. of Low Noise Oscillating Syst. Arrays (FS) WE4D: Nonlinear Behavioral Modeling of Microwave Circuits WE4E: Couplers, Hybrids and Splitters WE4F: Advancaed Packaging and Materials II WE4G: Low Noise Devices and MMICs Industry-hosted Cocktail Reception 5:45 to 7:15 PM Hyatt Awards Banquet 7:30 to 10 PM Hyatt Registration 7 AM to 3 PM IMS Exhibition 9 AM to 3 PM • µAPS 9 AM to 12:00 PM Thursday, June 16, 2005 TH1A: Novel Technologies for Signal Generation TH1B: High Power Amplifiers TH1C: mm and submm-wave Components for Emerging High Frequency Applications TH1D: Linear Modeling of Active and Passive Structures TH1E: Trends for Future Radar Systems with Electronically Scanned Arrays, Part 1 (SS) TH1F: Superconducting and Innovative Planar Filters TH1G: Advance Nonlinear and Active Device Measurements THIF: INTERACTIVE FORUM 1:30 TO 4:30 PM TH3A: Advances in Signal Generation Techniques TH4B: Wideband Communications TH3B: Advanced Radar Systems Systems TH4C: High Frequency Propagation TH3C: Metamaterial Waveguides and Effects TH2A: New Approaches for Low Noise Oscillators TH2B: Advances in High Power Amplifier Linearization TH2C: Millimeter-wave Monolithic Transceiver Components TH2D: Neural Network and Space Mapping Technologies TH2E: Trends for Future Radar Systems with Electronically Scanned Arrays, Part 2 (SS) TH2F: Synthetic Transmission Lines and Their Applications TH2G: Innovations in Microwave Measurement PTHA: On the Impact of Nanotechnology on the Microwave Field TH3D: Efficient CAD for Multilayer Cir. and Large Intercon. Networks TH3E: Biological Effects and Medical Applications TH3F: Novel Transmission Lines and Structures TH3G: Circuits and Techniques for Multi-Gigabit/sec Transmission TH4E: Advances in HF, VHF and UHF Technology TH4F: Left Handed Transmission Lines and Applications Friday, June 17, 2005 Registration 7 AM to 9 AM ARFTG Conference and Exhibition 7 AM to 5 PM – Renaissance TFA: Ferrite, Ferroelectric and Other Special Materials for Microwave Control TFB: Signal Integrity Modeling and Analysis WFA: Physics, Theory, Fabrication and Applications of Microwave Metamaterials WFB: RF Aspects of Software Defined Radio (SDR) WFC: Advances in Automated Modeling and Microwave Design WFD: Advances in High Efficiency Power Device and Circuit Technologies WFE: Recent Advances in RF MEMs WFG: Rediscovering Circuit Design Techniques for Microwave Components, WFF: Very Large Microwave Arrays for Radio Astronomy and Space Comm. Circuits and Subsystems: The Efficiency and Power of EM/Circuit Codesign WFH: See Through Wall Radars FS: Focused Session SS: Special Session TABLE OF CONTENTS INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM General Chairman’s Message Plenary Session Technical Sessions Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Panel Sessions Monday, Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday Interactive Forum Wednesday Thursday Special & Focused Sessions Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday Workshops & Tutorials Sunday Monday Friday µAPS & Exhibition Social Events RFIC SYMPOSIUM 2 2 Chairman’s Message Plenary Session Technical Sessions Monday Tuesday Interactive Forum Tuesday 28 36 46 45 55 6 14 15 76 77 ARFTG MICROWAVE MEASUREMENT CONFERENCE Chairman’s Message 6 Technical Sessions Friday 61 44 54 34 53 For updates and additional information: 17 22 56 62 71 www.ims2005.org CONTENTS (LISTED ALPHABETICALLY) Additional Meetings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Administrative Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65 ARFTG Chairman’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 ARFTG Microwave Measurement Conference . . . . . . .61 Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66 Education Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Exhibition Invitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Exhibitors and Exhibition Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64 Fellows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67 Focused Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34, 35 Long Beach Convention Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74 Long Beach Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70 Future IMS Locations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65 General Chairman’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 General Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67 Guest Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72 Historical Exhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70 Hotel Map and Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Housing Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 IEEE MTT-S Membership Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Interactive Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44, 54 Microwave Application & Product Seminars . . . . . . . .62 MTT-S Technical Program Chairs’ Message . . . . . . . . . .3 Panel Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45, 55 Plenary Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Registration Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Registration Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 RFIC Chairman’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 RFIC Symposium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14, 76 Social Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71 Special Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35, 53 Steering Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69 Student Paper Competition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 Technical Program Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68 Technical Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28, 36, 46 Tutorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17, 22, 56 Visa Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18, 23, 58 1 AN INVITATION TO MICROWAVE WEEK 2005 Welcome to the 2005 IEEE International Microwave Symposium, in Long Beach, California. The Steering Committee will cram this year’s “Microwave Week” full of technical paper sessions, focused sessions, poster sessions, lunch-time panels, unique and in-depth workshops and tutorials, a student paper competition, a display of historical artifacts, a vendor exhibition, the RFIC Conference, and the ARFTG Meeting. This year, there will not be a paper copy of the digest; there will only be a CDROM. It will be possible to order a hard copy from the Charlie Jackson IEEE Conference Publication Program; details will be available on-site. Long Beach has changed significantly since the Symposium was last here in 1989. Long Beach now has the Aquarium of the Tatsuo Itoh Vice Chair Pacific, the Queensway project has been completed with the return of the Pike. The Queen Mary was launched in a bygone era with a wireless transmitter, before the advent of satellite TV, radar, cell phones, and microwave ovens. Nowadays, almost every guest on the ship has their own microwave transceiver: a cell phone. In a way, the Queen Mary can symbolize how microwaves have become a part of the fabric of our lives. The 2005 Steering Committee has been working for eight years preparing for the Microwave Week, and the entire committee invites you to attend! Charlie Jackson General Chairman 2005 International Microwave Symposium Arvind Sharma Symposium Secretary Timothy Lee Local Arrangements Chair PLENARY SESSION The Plenary Session will be the formal opening of IMS2005 and will be held at 10:10 AM on Tuesday, June 14, 2005 in the Ballroom at the Long Beach Convention Center. The program for the session includes welcoming and introductory remarks by Charlie Jackson, Symposium General Chairman, and K.C. Gupta, President of MTT-S AdCom, an overview of the technical program by David Rutledge, Technical Program Chair, and the presentation of IEEE awards. Two keynote addresses will be presented in this session. Dr. Teresa Meng, Teresa Meng Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, will address “Digitally Assisted Analog Design for Wireless SoCs and Its Future.” Mr. Ziqiang Hou, Professor of the Institute of Acoustics China Academy of Science, will address “3G and Mobile Broadband Wireless Access.” Teresa H. Meng is the Reid Weaver Dennis Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. In 1999, Dr. Meng took leave from Stanford and founded Atheros Communications, Inc., which delivers the core technology for high-performance wireless communication systems. As a result of this effort, Dr. Meng was named one of the Top 10 Entrepreneurs in 2001 by Red Herring, Innovator of the Year in 2002 by MIT Sloan School eBA, and received the CIO Magazine 20/20 Vision Award in 2002. Dr. Meng’s current research interests include circuit optimization and neural signal processing. She has received many awards and honors for her research work at Stanford: an NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award, an ONR Young Investigator Award, an IBM Faculty Development Award, a Best Paper Award and a Distinguished Lecturer Award from the IEEE Signal Processing Society, the Eli Jury Award from UC Berkeley, and awards from other industry and academic organizations. Dr. Meng is a Fellow of the IEEE. She received her PhD in EECS from the University of California at Berkeley in 1988. Mr. Ziqiang Hou, previously the Chairman of the Board of KeJian Co. and Chief Scientist of China Netcom, is a professor of the Institute of Acoustics, China Academy of Science (CAS). Mr. Hou was the Secretary General of the Chinese Academy of Sciences from 1988 to 1993, and Director of the Institute of Acoustics CAS from 1993 to 1997. Mr. Hou is also an independent Nonexecutive Director of China Netcom Group Corporation (Hong Kong) Ltd., Chairman of Ziqiang Hou China Cellular Phone Handset Industry Summit Forum, Committeeman of the Telecommunication Science and Technology Committee of the Ministry of Information Industry (MII), a senior consultant to the National Bureau of Broadcast and TV, and a member of Information Expert Group of Shanghai, Tianjin, and Shenzhen. He leads an R&D group in digital information, consumer electronics products and broadband wired and wireless IP network area, in the DSP center of the Institute of Acoustics, CAS. He has won the 1st Class Chinese National Award of Science and Technology Progress. 2 IMS2005 TECHNICAL PROGRAM Welcome to the 2005 International Microwave Symposium. The 200 members of the Technical Program Committee have developed an exciting technical program. This year there were 984 submissions. The committee chose 344 papers for oral presentations, and 149 for the poster sessions. Scott Wedge and Jim Rosenberg organized the student competition. There are 20 student papers nominated for Dave Rutledge the competition. The student paper awards will be presented at the Awards Luncheon on Thursday, June Mike DeLisio 16th. There will also be workshops, organized by Ethan Wang, special sessions, organized by Alina Moussessian, and lunch panel sessions, organized by Emilio Sovero. There are 38 workshops on Sunday, Monday and Friday, and eight special sessions during the week. Panel sessions are on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday at noon. Panel sessions are open to all who are registered for the IMS, with lunch available for an extra charge. We would like to thank Jeff Pond, Jon Hacker, Tim Lee, and Larry Whicker for their work in paper management, and the volunteers of the Long Beach Steering Committee for all of their arrangements. We Bob York hope that you have an interesting week, and that you enjoy your stay in Long Beach. IMS2005 PROGRAM GUIDE IMS2005 PUBLICATIONS We have prepared this program guide to assist you during your visit to Long Beach for the 2005 IEEE International Microwave Symposium. The program guide contains a listing of the technical program and information on registration, hotels, social programs and other useful items. Despite all our attempts to keep the information accurate, there will be errors and there will be changes after the printed version goes to press. Additional information will be available in the registration area during the conference. Please check www.ims2005.org Steve Swift for updates. Enjoy your visit to Long Beach in 2005 Steve Swift, Publicity Chair All IMS2005 registrants will receive a symposium CDROM digest. We are not publishing any paper copy of the symposium digest. The CDROM will contain all IMS2005 technical papers as well as 65th ARFTG. Instructions for how to order a paper copy of the digest will be available on-site at the symposium. In addition to the CDROM, registrants will receive an abstract book containing technical session information and brief summaries of the symposium technical papers. The spiral bound abstract book will have space beDebabani Choudhury side each abstract for notes. We hope that the availability of the CDROM and abstract book will help you enjoy the symposium technical sessions. Debabani Choudhury, Publications Chair Dave Rutledge, IMS2005 TPC Chair Mike DeLisio, IMS2005 TPC Co-Chair Bob York, IMS2005 TPC Co-Chair IMS2005 WEB TEAM The IMS2005 website is located at http://www.ims2005.org. It presents the important information that you need about this conference. The website has been categorized into seven different pages for navigation. The home page shows important dates and conference sponsors. The Steering Committee page lists members, positions, telephone numbers and email addresses. Author Information describes how to submit your paper and offers tips on how to prepare an effective presentation. The Attendee Information page contains useful inTimothy Lee formation to help you register for the con- ference, reserve hotel rooms, arrange your trip, and get familiar with Long Beach before you arrive for the conference. The Technical Program page contains the complete technical program for the conference. The Social Program contains information to help you relax and enjoy time away from the meetings. The Exhibitor Information page contains a list of all exhibitors, instructions on how to become an exhibitor and exhibitor hotel reservations. Please continue to check the website for useful updates both before and during the conference. We hope this website helps you enjoy IMS2005. Timothy Lee IMS2005 Web Team Chair 3 2005 INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM — INTERACTIVE FORUM IMS2005 UNIVERSITY LIAISON ACTIVITIES This year’s International Microwave Symposium will once again have up to ten booths in the symposium exhibit hall devoted to publicizing university programs. Universities with regional, national, and international audiences are contacted in early February to gauge interest in this important educational outreach activity. Stop by the booths, talk with the students and faculty, and view the latest research being done at these universities. The IMS2005 will also Bill Deal have student volunteers assisting the Steering Committee during the conference. A number of graduate and undergraduate students from local universities in the Los Angeles Basin have been invited to assist the symposium. All of the booths will display interesting Vesna Radisic information on current projects, and students will staff them. Spend a few moments chatting with these students. You will find their youthful enthusiasm bodes well for the future of the MTT society. Bill Deal and Vesna Radisic IMS2005 University Liaison The Interactive Forum (IF) is the International Microwave Symposium’s name for what is commonly called a poster session. The IF provides an opportunity for presenters to engage in discussions with symposium attendees in a lively and personal way not available from the front of a lecture hall. Each IF session will be organized to present approximately 70 papers each, and an additional special Student Paper session is planned for this year’s symposium. Every IMS technical specialty will be represented at the IFs. Space will be provided for all IMS Hector J. De Los Santos authors to discuss and answer questions on their papers in a space adjacent to the IF area associated with their technical interest. All IMS attendees are invited to attend the IF sessions. Complimentary food and beverages will be provided. Hector J. De Los Santos IMS2005 Interactive Forum Chair 2005 WORKSHOPS AND TUTORIALS to the RF integrated circuit community. Nearly all of the workshops devoted to RF and microwave test and measurement will be held on Monday, so as not to overlap the 65th ARFTG Conference which is being held on Friday. More details on the IMS2005 Sunday workshops and tutorials begin on page 17. Further information on Monday’s offerings start on page 22. Detailed descriptions of the Friday workshops and tutorials commence on page 56. There will be 31 workshops and six tutorials held in Long Beach during Microwave Week. The IMS and RFIC 2005 workshops and tutorials cover a broad range of topics from fundamental microwave filter design to in-depth applications such as radio astronomy and space communications. At the same time, several “hot spots” aimed for modern wireless applications are highlighted. This should bring significant interests of attendees from both industry and academia. The majority of the workshops and tutorials on Sunday will be focused on technology of interest Y. Ethan Wang Workshops and Tutorials Chair Yi-Chi Shih Sunday Workshops Kevin M.K.H. Leong Monday Workshops 4 Kevin Miyashiro Monday Workshops Paul Yu Friday Workshops IMS2005 SPECIAL AND FOCUSED SESSIONS IMS2005 PANEL SESSIONS The IMS2005 Technical Program Committee has organized special and focused sessions in technically diverse areas of interest. These sessions present the latest information on rapidly evolving areas related to microwave theory and techniques. All papers in these sessions were solicited and invited by the session organizers. This year’s focused and special sesAlina Moussessian sion topics are: John Horton ✗ FBAR Filters for Cellular Phone Applications ✗ Distributed RF Sensor/Communication Systems ✗ Terahertz Imaging ✗ Analysis and Applications of Low Phase-Noise Oscillating System Arrays ✗ Future Technologies for Microwave/Millimeter-wave Applications ✗ Trends for Future Radar Systems with Electronically Scanned Arrays, Part I ✗ Trends for Future Radar Systems with Electronically Scanned Arrays, Part II Alina Moussessian IMS2005 Special and Focused Session Co-Chair John Horton IMS2005 Special and Focused Session Co-Chair Microwaves Week 2005 will feature eight lunchtime (12:00 to 1:20 PM) panel sessions. Six of these panel sessions are sponsored by IMS2005. One is sponsored by RFIC2005 and one is sponsored by both IMS2005 and RFIC2005. These panel sessions will provide attendees with the opportunity to hear different views from panels of experts on subjects of current interest, while at the same time allowing a high level of audience interaction. The following topics will be discussed: Emilio Sovero Monday, June 13, 2005 ✗ CMOS PAs Step on the GaAs! Tuesday, June 14, 2005 ✗ 3G Handsets – Too Much Power in Your Hands? ✗ Outsourcing: The Impact on the Microwave Industry ✗ RF/Microwave/Millimeter-wave Applications of Metamaterials Wednesday, June 15, 2005 ✗ CAD Tools for Microwave IC Design ✗ Trends for Future Deep Space Exploration ✗ Venture Capital and Entrepreneurial Opportunities in Microwaves Thursday, June 16, 2005 ✗ On the Impact of Nanotechnology on the Microwave Field Detailed descriptions of each of the panel sessions can be found on pages 45 and 55. The panel sessions are open and free to conference registrants, and do not require separate registration for participation. A convenient box lunch will be available at a nominal cost for those attending the panel sessions and others. Please use the registration form on page 9 to purchase a box lunch on a particular day. Emilio Sovero IMS2005 Panel Sessions Chair PAPER SUBMISSIONS This year has marked the return of the all-volunteer technical paper handling system that had its debut at IMS2000. We have worked hard to make it as robust and intuitive as possible while retaining the flexibility to handle the complexities of the conference with its 30 technical program committees and 200 reviewers. This year we received over 1000 paper submissions, with more than half received in the final day; as good a test as anyone could devise and one that was passed without significant complications. We hope that authors liked the new Jon Hacker streamlined approach to paper submission for IMS2005. Every effort was made to eliminate asking authors for unnecessary or redundant information during the submission process. Without the efforts of a paid team, we have had to rely heavily on the skilled help of our dedicated IMS volunteers. We are especially thankful to Jeff Pond, who wrote the system code and worked tirelessly to make it better throughout the year. We are also indebted to Blythe Deckman who built and managed our wireless network for the TPC meetings, and Tim Lee who worked with Jeff to get the system ported over to the MTT Society web server. This permanent server site should make using the system in future years straightforward, and hopefully eliminate the past ritual of changing the submission and review software every few years. With a stable foundation now established, we can instead focus on refining the process to make it even better down the road. In the meantime, we look forward to welcoming you to Long Beach. Jon Hacker IMS Electronic Paper Manager 2005 EXHIBITION The exhibition that is part of Microwave Week gives you the opportunity to visit displays from more than 400 companies that will be showing the latest products and services available to our industry. The exhibition will be held in Halls A, B and C on the lower level of the convention center and will also include the Historical Exhibit and the Microwave Application and Product Seminars (µAPS), which are now in their tenth year. These seminars have grown in popularity and will be expanded, once again, this year. The exhibition is open from 9:00 AM to Harlan Howe, Jr. 5:00 PM on Tuesday and Wednesday and from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM on Thursday. (Please note that children under the age of 14 will not be admitted to the exhibition hall at any time.) I hope that you will take advantage of this unique chance to visit the largest group of microwave exhibitors at any show in the world. Harlan Howe, Jr. Exhibition Manager 5 MESSAGE FROM THE RFIC CHAIRMAN guished guests will share their views on the future direction of semiconductor device technology applied to wireless and mobile communications IC’s. Sunday evening also features the RFIC Reception. The Reception begins after the conclusion of the Plenary and provides a social venue allowing old friends and new acquaintances to meet and catch up on the wireless industry. The technical program continues on Monday and Tuesday with oral paper presentations, panel sessions, and an interactive forum. A Monday Panel Session during lunch will allow interactive discussions on the research vs. realities of Si device technology competing with GaAs technology for handset power amplifiers. Panelist from academia and industry will express their views on this topic. A Tuesday Panel session during lunch focuses on a hot 3G phone topic, quite literally, “Too Much Power in Your Hands?.” The interactive forum begins on Tuesday afternoon and is an excellent opportunity for attendees to meet authors and discuss their presentations in detail. The RFIC Symposium concludes on Tuesday allowing participants to attend the IMS and ARFTG as well as plenty of time to visit the exhibit hall. Welcome to the 2005 RFIC Symposium! Again this year, the RFIC Symposium continues to build upon its heritage as one of the foremost IEEE technical conferences dedicated to the latest innovations in RFIC development of wireless and wire line communication ICs with an exciting technical program. Running in conjunction with the International Microwave Symposium and Exhibition, the RFIC Symposium adds to the excitement of the microwave week with three days focused exclusively on RFIC technology and innovation. The symposium Joseph Staudinger begins on Sunday, June 12th, with tutorials and workshops focused on RF technology, design, and system issues. The RFIC Plenary Session begins at 5:30 PM on Sunday, June 12th, following the workshops. It will be held in the Ballroom of the Long Beach Convention Center and opens the formal technical program. Note that the placement of the Plenary Session on Sunday evening at 5:30 PM represents a change in date/time from past years. The Plenary Session will feature two distinguished speakers from industry, Mr. Jerry Neal from RF Micro Devices and Mr. Ed Healy from Silicon Laboratories. These two distin- Joseph Staudinger General Chairman 2005 RFIC Symposium 65TH ARFTG MICROWAVE MEASUREMENT CONFERENCE Welcome to the 65th Automatic RF Techniques Group (ARFTG) Conference being held at the Renaissance Hotel on Friday, June 17, 2005. The conference will include technical presentations, an interactive forum, and an exhibition; all to give you ample opportunity to interact with your colleagues in the automated RF and microwave test community. The conference theme is “Measurements for MillimeterWave Applications” with papers focusing on measurements for point-to-point communications, line-of-sight systems, automotive Tom Ruttan radar, differential measurements, trace-ability to national standards laboratories, models for measurement verification, vector network analysis, large-signal network analysis, power, and noise including on-wafer measurements. Also, be sure to check for any joint ARFTG/IMS workshops being held. This year ARFTG is co-sponsoring two workshops: “On-Wafer Microwave Measurement: State of the Art and Future Direc- tions” and “High Frequency Digital Backplane Interconnect Characterization and Design.” An important part of any ARFTG Conference is the opportunity to interact one-on-one with colleagues, experts and vendors in the RF and microwave test and measurement community. Whether your interests include highthroughput production or one-of-a-kind metrology measurements, complex systems or simple circuit modeling, small signal S-parameter or large-signal non-linear measurements, phase noise or noise figure, DC or lightwave, you will find an interested party and most likely an expert. Starting with the continental breakfast in the exhibition area, continuing through the two exhibition/interactive forum sessions and the luncheon, there will be ample opportunity for discussion with others facing similar challenges. You, along with the other attendees, may find that these interactions are often the best source of ideas and information for their current projects. So come and join us. You’ll find that the atmosphere is informal and friendly. Tom Ruttan Conference Chair 6 ADDITIONAL MEETINGS (CHECK WWW.IMS2005.ORG FOR UPDATES) Saturday, June 11 10:00 AM–12:00 PM 1:00 PM–3:00 PM 3:00 PM–5:00 PM 5:00 PM–7:30 PM 7:30 PM–11:30 PM 7:00 AM–9:00 AM Sunday, June 12 7:00 AM–8:30 AM 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 12:00 AM–1:00 PM 12:00 AM–1:00 PM 7:00 PM–9:00 PM Monday, June 13 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–8:00 AM 7:00 AM–5:00 PM 12:00 PM–1:00 PM 12:00 PM–2:00 PM 5:45 PM–8:00 PM Tuesday, June 14 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–5:00 PM 12:00 PM–1:30 PM 12:00 PM–2:00 PM 1:30 PM–4:00 PM 4:30 PM–8:30 PM 5:30 PM–7:00 PM 6:00 PM–9:00 PM 6:00 PM–8:00 PM Wednesday, June 15 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–5:00 PM 12:00 PM–2:00 PM 5:45 PM–7:15 PM 7:30 PM–10:00 PM Thursday, June 16 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–5:00 PM 12:00 PM–2:00 PM 12:00 PM–2:00 PM Friday, June 17 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–9:00 AM 7:00 AM–1:00 PM 12:00 PM–1:00 PM AdCom Budget Committee AdCom Long Range Planning Speakers’ Preparation AdCom Reception and Dinner AdCom Meeting Speakers’ Breakfast AdCom Breakfast Workshops Breakfast Speakers’ Preparation AdCom Meeting AdCom Lunch Workshops Lunch RFIC Reception Speakers’ Breakfast Workshops Breakfast Speakers’ Preparation Workshops Lunch TMTT & MWCL Editor’s Luncheon Microwave Journal Reception Speakers’ Breakfast Attendees’ Breakfast Speakers’ Preparation TCC Meeting 2005 RFIC TPC Lunch Student Paper Competition Chapter Chairs’ Reception and Meeting Women in Engineering Reception Ham Radio Social RF and Microwave Education Forum Speakers’ Breakfast Attendees’ Breakfast Speakers’ Preparation 2006 IMS TPC Lunch Industry–hosted Cocktail Reception MTT-S Awards Banquet Speakers’ Breakfast Attendees’ Breakfast Speakers’ Preparation 2005/2006 IMS Steering Committee Lunch Students Awards Luncheon Workshops Breakfast Speakers’ Breakfast Speakers’ Preparation Workshops Lunch RF AND MICROWAVE EDUCATION FORUM TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005, 6:00-8:00 PM LONG BEACH HYATT REGENCY The Forum, held during the International Microwave Symposium, is an annual gathering of educators from around the world who have professional interest in RF and microwave engineering. It provides an opportunity for meeting, and networking with, colleagues having common interests, and serves as a venue for discussing topics of current interest to the educators in this field, examining innovative ideas related to education, and sharing information. A different theme is selected each year for the Forum to focus the discussion. 2005 Theme: Creating Online Content and Using Web-Based Learning Tools in Microwave Education Organizers: Hyatt Hyatt LBCC Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt LBCC Hyatt Hyatt LBCC LBCC Hyatt LBCC LBCC LBCC Hyatt Aquarium of the Pacific Hyatt LBCC LBCC Hyatt Hyatt LBCC Ballroom Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt LBCC LBCC Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt Hyatt LBCC LBCC Hyatt Hyatt LBCC Hyatt LBCC LBCC Online education has gained recent attention in both academic and post-graduate educational settings. The Tuesday Rump Session will include talks from a panel of educators and other content providers who have used this new medium. In addition to the talks, a demonstration of the capabilities of the new IEEE Xplore-Enabled Learning Library (XELL) project will also be offered. An interactive discussion between panelists and the audience will conclude the session. A buffet dinner will be provided for all attendees. Please direct all inquiries and communications regarding the 2005 Forum to its organizer, Prof. J. Stevenson Kenney at j.s.kenney@ieee.org. J. Stevenson Kenney, Georgia Institute of Technology Sanjay Raman, Virginia Polytechnic Institute 7 2005 IEEE MICROWAVE THEORY AND TECHNIQUES SOCIETY MEMBERSHIP The IEEE (Eye-triple-E) is a non-profit, technical professional association of more than 380,000 individual members in 150 countries. The full name is the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., although the organization is most popularly known and referred to by the letters I-E-E-E. Through its members, the IEEE is a leading authority in technical areas ranging from computer engineering, biomedical technology and telecommunications, to electric power, aerospace and consumer electronics, among others. The IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques Society (MTT-S) is a transnational society with more than 11,000 members and 110 chapters worldwide. Our society promotes the advancement of microwave theory and its applications, usually at frequencies from 200 MHz to 1 THz and beyond. As we enter into an exciting future our mission is to continue to understand and influence microwave technology. The benefits of IEEE membership include these offerings: • Conference registration discounted rates (save $180 on IMS-2005 registration) • Membership in one or more of 37 IEEE Societies and four Technical Councils • Subscriptions to online reference materials through IEEE Xplore and IEEE Member Digital Library • Free IEEE Email Alias including virus scanning and optional spam filtering • Get the IEEE Financial Advantage – negotiated exclusively for IEEE members • More than 1,150 student branches at universities worldwide To Join IEEE or renew your membership, please go to http://www.ieee.org/services/join/ Send email to new.membership@ieee.org, or call 1 (800) 678-IEEE. IEEE MEMBERSHIP DUES (STANDARD RATES SHOWN, PROVISIONAL RATES AVAILABLE) Residence Member Full Year Member Half Year* Student Full Year Student Half Year* $151.00 $139.12 $148.40 $127.00 $120.00 $121.00 $75.50 $69.56 $74.20 $63.50 $60.00 $60.50 $30.00 $32.10 $34.50 $25.00 $25.00 $25.00 $15.00 $16.05 $17.25 $12.50 $12.50 $12.50 $114.00 $17.50 $17.00 $14.00 United States Canada (incl. GST) Canada (incl. HST) Africa, Europe, Middle East Latin America Asia, Pacific SOCIETY DUES Microwave Theory and Techniques PUBLICATIONS Microwave (society magazine) MTT CD-ROM Collection Microwave and Wireless Components Letters Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques n/c $116.00 $116.00 $124.00 n/c $18.00 $18.00 $112.00 VISA INFORMATION: TEMPORARY VISITORS TO THE US get informed of the need for additional screening at the time they submit their applications. • Citizens of certain countries may be able to travel on a Visa Waiver Program (VWP) if they meet certain conditions. Participating countries in the VWP include Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brunei, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Starting October 1, 2003, each Visa Waiver Program traveler must present a machine-readable passport (MRP) at the US port of entry to enter the US without a visa. Otherwise a nonimmigrant visa is required. Additional information can be found on the US Department of State Bureau of Consular Affairs Visa Services Web site at http://travel.state.gov/nonimmigrantvisas.html. International travelers (citizens of other countries), coming to the US temporarily, require a VISA to enter the US that relates to the purpose of their travel. Please contact your local American Embassy or Consulate as early as possible to determine if you or those accompanying you need a Visa to enter the US. To avoid frustrations and disappointments: • Please contact your local American Embassy or Consulate for information about current visa processing time estimates and processes. You can also contact the US embassy or consulate via the US Department of State site at http://travel.state.gov/ visa/tempvisitors_info. • Please apply for your visa as early as possible. Visa applications are now subject to a greater scrutiny than in the past. For many applicants, a personal appearance interview is required as a standard part of visa processing. This can cause longer processing times since applicants affected by these procedures only 8 Advance Conference Registration IEEE MTT-S MICROWAVE WEEK EVENTS June 12–17, 2005 ✦ Long Beach, CA ✦ IMS ✦ RFIC ✦ ARFTG Each registrant must submit a separate form. A copy may be used. Registration deadlines: May 5, 2005 for advance fax or mail; May 12, 2005 for advance Website. 30% higher on-site fees apply thereafter. Fax (Credit Card only) 781-769-5037 Do NOT mail hard copy if Faxed On-line www.mtt-sregistration.com Mail (Check or Credit Card) MTT-S Registration 685 Canton St. Norwood, MA 02062 For information or handicap special needs only (phone registration is not available) (781) 769-9750. NAME First Last AFFILIATION Company, Etc. Mail Stop ADDRESS Street City State/Prov. Postal Code Country e-mail Address ■ Yes, I would like to receive information by e-mail from IEEE/MTT-S US/CANADA TEL. IEEE MEMBER Yes No ■ Yes, I would like to receive information by e-mail from microwave/wireless industry companies INT'L TEL. IEEE Membership No.* MTT-S MEMBER ARFTG MEMBER *Must be given and valid IEEE card presented at Symposium to qualify for member discount. An invalid number will void this registration. Name of Guest Yes Yes No No For a complimentary badge for plenary session and exhibits To register, check ✓ the appropriate boxes and enter corresponding fees in the Remittance column. ONLY PAID ATTENDEES WILL BE ADMITTED TO THE WORKSHOPS AND TECHNICAL SESSIONS. WORKSHOPS AND TUTORIALS For paid attendees only. (SEE BACK OF THIS PAGE FOR TITLES.) STUDENT/RETIREE/ IEEE MEMBER NON-MEMBER LIFE MEMBER If you are not an IEEE Member and wish to take advantage of IEEE Member registration rates, you may, before mailing or faxing this form to enter your registration, call IEEE at 800-678-IEEE or go to http://www.ieee.org/services/join/ and become an IEEE Member. (Includes abstract book, exhibits and µAPS) Full Day Half Day SUNDAY WSA WSB WSC WSD WSE WSF WSG WSH WSI WSJ WSK WSL INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM (Tue., Wed. & Thur.) All IMS Sessions (with IMS CD ROM) All IMS Sessions (no IMS CD ROM) Single-Day Registration (with IMS CD ROM) Student, Retiree, Life Member (with IMS CD ROM) RFIC SYMPOSIUM (Mon. & Tue.) IEEE MEMBER $370 $320 $190 $160 NONMEMBER $550 $490 $270 $120 REMITTANCE $ _____________ $ _____________ $ _____________ $ _____________ $195 $280 $ _____________ $250 $470 $ _____________ MEMBER NONMEMBER $180 $120 $280 $120 (Includes exhibits, RFIC Sessions & Reception, RFIC Digest & CD ROM.) RFIC Reception Only ARFTG – MICROWAVE MEASUREMENT CONFERENCE (Fri.) (Includes exhibits, breakfast, lunch, Digest & ARFTG Exhibition. Member rates available to ARFTG or IEEE members.) ARFTG Student, Retiree, Life Member ADDITIONAL DIGESTS AND CD ROMS $ _____________ $ _____________ $ _____________ $ _____________ AWARDS BANQUET (Wed. Eve.) $ _____________ $70 $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ MONDAY WMA WMB WMC WMD WME WMF WMG WMH WMI WMJ WMK TMA OPTIONAL BOX LUNCHES FOR PANEL SESSIONS (Attendance is open to all. See reverse side for schedule.) PMO: Monday $15 PTU: Tuesday $15 PWE: Wednesday $15 PTH: Thursday $15 $150 (Full Day) (Full Day) (Full Day) (Full Day) (Morning) (Morning) (Morning) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) $225 $175 FRIDAY WFA WFB WFC WFD WFE WFF WFG WFH TFA TFB (Full Day) (Full Day) (Full Day) (Full Day) (Morning) (Morning) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ (Full Day) $____ (Morning) $____ (Afternoon) $____ TOTAL $ ________ GUEST PROGRAMS (FULL DAY UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED) GSA: GSB: GSC: GSD: GSE: GSF: GSG: Getty Museum Tour (Half Day) A Day in San Juan Capistrano Pasadena and the Huntington Exploring Long Beach Long Beach Multi-cultural Tour Catalina Island Trip* Golf Outing* The only acceptable forms of payment are check, money order, MasterCard, VISA or American Express. Make your check or money order (US $ ONLY on a US Bank or Traveler’s Check) payable to: IEEE/MTT-S VISA $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ $____ Full day and morning workshop or tutorial fees include workshops CD-ROM, continental breakfast, lunch and refreshment breaks. Afternoon workshop or tutorial fees include workshops CD-ROM, lunch and afternoon refreshments. Presenter notes are available at the workshop. *Advance registration only MasterCard (Full Day) (Full Day) (Full Day) (Full Day) (Morning) (Morning) (Morning) (Morning) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) (Afternoon) $105 $180 TSA (Full Day) $____ TSB (Full Day) $____ TSC (Morning) $____ $ ______________ $ ______________ (For pickup on-site only. After the Symposium, Digests and CD ROMs will be available from the IEEE.) IMS and ARFTG CD ROM Qty. ___ @ $150 $100 $ _____________ RFIC Digest Qty. ___ @ $150 $175 $ _____________ $100 $ _____________ RFIC CD-ROM Qty. ___ @ $150 $150 $ _____________ ARFTG Digest Qty. ___ @ $130 $ _____________ $100 Workshop CD-ROM I (Sun./Mon.) Qty. ___ @ $150 Workshop CD-ROM II (Mon./Fri.) Qty. ___ @ $150 $100 $ _____________ Qty. ___ @ $155 $105 TOTAL ____ @$55 ____ @$75 ____ @$75 ____ @$50 ____ @$60 ____ @$65 ____ @$70 $________ $________ $________ $________ $________ $________ $________ GUEST PROGRAM TOTAL$________ TOTAL REMITTANCE $ _________________ INDIVIDUAL PAYMENT MUST ACCOMPANY FORM American Express Card # Signature__________________________________________ (Signature must accompany credit card payment) Exp. Date Written requests for refunds will be honored if received by April 25, 2005. 9 FOR A MORE DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ANY OF THE EVENTS ON THIS PAGE, VISIT WWW.IMS2005.ORG Sunday Monday Friday TUTORIALS T TSA TSB TSC TMA TFA TFB 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Filter I: RF and Microwave Filter Design UTORIALS 8:00(F AMOR –5:00 PM DETAILED Basic RFIC Building Blocks A MORE DESCRIPTION OF ANY OF THE EVENTS ON THIS PAGE, VISIT WWW.IMS2005.ORG) 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Monolithic Distributed Power Management for Next Generation Wireless Applications 1:00 PM–5:00 PM EMI/EMC Fundamentals for RF/MW Engineers 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Ferrite, Ferroelectric and Other Special Materials for Microwave Control Signal Integrity Modeling and Analysis 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Friday June 17, 2005 Monday June 13, 2005 Sunday June 12, 2005 WORKSHOPS WSA WSB WSC WSD WSE WSF WSG WSH WSI WSJ WSK WSL WMA WMB WMC WMD WME WMF WMG WMH WMI WMJ WMK WFA WFB WFC WFD WFE WFF WFG 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–5:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 8:00 AM–12:00 PM 1:00 PM–5:00 PM WFH 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Monday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Thursday PMA PTUA PTUB PTUC PWA PWB PWC PTHA Competitiveness of Broadband Wireless Access (BWA) Systems Full CMOS Radio Advanced Technologies for Next Generation RFICs Advanced System Solutions and Integration Technologies for High Volume Wireless LAN Applications Impact of Component Modeling on Microwave and Millimeter-wave Circuit Performance Accuracy of System-level Figures of Merit for Wireless Applications Circuit Characterization, Modeling and Testing: Can It Really Be Done Without Impedance Tuners? Noise Shaping Methods for RFIC Design On-wafer Microwave Measurements: State of the Art and Future Directions Practical Implementation of RF Power Amplifiers for Cellular Base Stations Design Considerations and Tools for the System Level Design of RFICs Multi-band Multi-mode RFICs Application and Technology of High Speed Analog to Digital Converters Filter II: Practical Aspects of Microwave Filter Design and Realization Advances in RF Power Amplifiers: Modeling, Design and Linearization Terahertz Radiation: Technology, Applications and Measurement Methods AM Noise in Modern Receivers Packaging and Interconnects for Microwave Photonics Applications Liquid Crystal Polymers for Microwave and Millimeter-wave Packaging High Frequency Digital Backplane Interconnect Characterization and Design New Developments in Low Noise Frequency Sources Low Cost Packaging for Microwave and Millimeter-wave Products Technology and Implementation of High Speed/GHz Digital Interconnections Physics, Theory, Fabrication and Applications of Microwave Metamaterials RF Aspects of Software Defined Radio (SDR) Advances in Automated Modeling and Microwave Design Advances in High Efficiency Power Device and Circuit Technologies Recent Advances in RF MEMs Very Large Microwave Arrays for Radio Astronomy and Space Communications Rediscovering Circuit Design Techniques for Microwave Components, Circuits and Subsystems: The Efficiency and Power of EM/Circuit Codesign See Through Wall Radars PANEL SESSIONS 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM 12:00 PM–1:20 PM CMOS PAs Step on the GaAs! 3G Handsets – Too Much Power in Your Hands? Outsourcing: The Impact on the Microwave Industry RF/Microwave/Millimeter-wave Applications of Metamaterials CAD Tools for Microwave IC Design Trends for Future Deep Space Exploration Venture Capital and Entrepreneurial Opportunities in Microwaves On the Impact of Nanotechnology on the Microwave Field µAPS Tuesday 9:00 AM–4:30 PM • Wednesday 9:00 AM–4:50 PM • Thursday 9:00 AM–12:00 PM SOCIAL EVENTS Sunday Monday Tuesday Tuesday Wednesday Wednesday 7:00 PM–9:00 PM 6:00 PM–8:00 PM 5:30 PM–7:00 PM 6:00 PM–9:00 PM 5:45 PM–7:15 PM 7:30 PM–10:00 PM RFIC Reception Microwave Journal Reception Women in Engineering Reception Ham Radio Social Industry Reception Awards Banquet NOON–5:00 PM 9:00 AM–3:30 PM 9:00 AM–3:00 PM 9:00 AM–3:00 PM 9:00 AM–3:00 PM 9:00 AM–5:00 PM 7:30 AM–1:30 PM Getty Museum Tour A Day in San Juan Capistrano Pasadena and the Huntington Exploring Long Beach Long Beach Multi-cultural Tour Catalina Island Trip Golf Outing GUEST PROGRAMS Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Thursday Friday GSA GSB GSC GSD GSE GSF GSG 10 CONFERENCE HOUSING 2005 IEEE MTT-S INT’L MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM ATTENDEE JUNE 11–17, 2005 • LONG BEACH, CA MTT-S • ARFTG • RFIC ATIMS use code Reservations may be made only on-line, by fax or by mail and must be received by the Housing Bureau between February 1, 2005 and May 10, 2005. Changes and modifications should be made through the Housing Bureau until May 10, 2005 using one of these methods. ON-LINE FAX www.ims2005.org Code: ATIMS MAIL IEEE IMS2005 Housing Bureau Attn: Christy Lankenau 455 Hoes Lane, Piscataway, NJ 08855 732-465-6447 INSTRUCTIONS AND HOUSING BUREAU POLICY 1. Please print or type all data requested. not be processed. Provide complete credit card information or mail a 2. Confirmations will be sent after each reservation booking, modification check payable to IEEE IMS 2005 Housing Bureau. Credit cards must be and/or cancellation. If you do not receive a confirmation via e-mail, fax or valid through June 2005 to be used for deposits. mail within 14 days after any transaction, contact the Housing Bureau by 6. Changes, modifications and cancellations prior to May 10, 2005 must be phone or e-mail. You will not receive a confirmation from the hotel. made in writing through the Housing Bureau. Reservations secured by a 3. All rates are per room per night and are subject to 12% tax (subject to check will be assessed $15.00 fees if cancelled at any time. Reservations change). guaranteed by credit card may be cancelled without penalty until May 31, 4. Request room and bedding and indicate special requests in the section 2005 after which $15.00 fees will be charged for cancellations. provided on the form. Specific room types will be assigned at check-in. Please 7. Changes after May 10, 2005, must be made with your hotel. 8. Valid Government ID will be required at check-in for Government rate be advised that requests are not guaranteed. rooms. 5. A deposit of equal to the room for one night is required for each reservation. Requests received without deposits will be returned and will Requests for blocks of rooms without named occupants must be accompanied by this completed form and faxed to 732-465-6447. Questions about room blocks: 800-810-4333 or e-mail mtt-s05reservations@ieee.org. LISTED CONVENTION RATES ARE AVAILABLE ONLY FOR RESERVATIONS MADE BY MAY 10, 2005 HOTEL PREFERENCE Hotel locations and rates are shown on the reverse side of this form. Please show at least three choices. First choice _____________________________ Second choice _________________________________ Third choice ___________________________________ Fourth choice _____________________________ Fifth choice___________________________________ Sixth choice ___________________________________ If hotel choices are unavailable, which is most important: Rate ______ or Location ______ (please select one) Name First Last e-mail Company Address City __________________________________________________ Country _______________Daytime Phone ( ) State/Province _________________________ _______________________________or FAX ( ) ZIP/Postal Code _________________ ____________________________________ w/Int’l Country Code Deposit paid by: ■ Check or Money Order ■ MasterCard (Payable to: IEEE IMS 2005 Housing Bureau) ■ Visa ■ American Express ■ Diners Club ■ Discover CARDHOLDER NAME (printed) CARDHOLDER SIGNATURE *REQUIRED CARD NO. ______________________________________ EXP. DATE (Must be later than 6-30-2005) ________________________ ROOM OCCUPANTS 1. Print or type names of persons occupying each room. If more than two rooms are required, attach a list providing the information requested below for each additional room. 2. Select room type desired, indicate arrival and departure dates, and special requests (not guaranteed). Occupants (first name first) ROOM NO. 1 ROOM NO. 2 1. 2. 1. 2. Check one: ■ Single ■ Double (1 bed) ■ Dbl/Dbl (2 dbl beds) Arr. Date: ____________________ Dep. Date: ____________________ Requests: ■ Smoking ■ Non-Smoking ■ Wheelchair Accessible ■ King Check one: ■ Single ■ Double (1 bed) ■ Dbl/Dbl (2 dbl beds) Arr. Date: ____________________ Dep. Date: ____________________ Requests: ■ Smoking ■ Non-Smoking ■ Wheelchair Accessible ■ King Di ag LONG BEACH AIRPORT HOLIDAY INN FOR TRIPLE OR QUADRUPLE OCCUPANCY RATES. Pa cif ic Co as Anaheim St. Courtesy of Long Beach Convention & Visitors Bureau 4 miles 710 Catalina Express Terminal 8 1st St. es oy itos 2 9 MARRIOTT Seaside Wy. Pike at Convention and Center Harbor Shoreline Park Visitors’ Center 5 Seaside Wy. Seaside Long Beach Arena Qu een sw Pike Path Do ay B Walk Rainbow Lagoon Shoreline Village 710 Olive Ave. Alam Lime Ave. Atlantic Ave. 3rd St. Broadway WESTIN LONG BEACH Visitors Bureau Queen’s Way 3 Linden Ave. Elm Ave. Transit Mall 4th St. wn M wn to ina ar ay Catalina Terminal Queen Mary Seaport QUEEN Long Beach Cruise Terminal at the Queen Mary MAP NO. HOTEL SINGLE/DOUBLE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Coast Long Beach Courtyard Marriott Hilton Holiday Inn – Airport Hyatt Regency– Headquarters Long Beach Marriott – Airport Queen Mary (inside/outside cabins) Renaissance Westin Long Beach $120.00 $119.00 $139.00 $125.00 $153.00 $174.00 $135.00/$145.00 $151.00 $165.00 12 Di eg o Fw y. Anaheim St. t Ave. Pine Ave. Pacific Ave. Cedar Ave. Chestnut Ave. Magnolia Ave. Daisy Ave. Maine Ave. Long Beach Fwy. Bike Path Golden Shore Ave. 5th St. City Place Sa n Atherton St. 3rd St. 6th St. HILTON Long Beach Area 405 TO 710 FWY SOUTH Stearns 7th St. 7th St. To 405 FWY sC Lo 4 Bellflower Blvd. Redondo Willow St. Lakewood Blvd. 6 CHECK WITH THE HOUSING BUREAU 710 ot LONG BEACH MARRIOTTSpring LISTED CONVENTION RATES ARE AVAILABLE ONLY FOR RESERVATIONS MADE BY MAY 10, 2005 Palo Verde 2005 IMS CONFERENCE HOTELS no na l Studebaker Rd. Conant St. REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS ON-SITE REGISTRATION FEES Registration fees are required of all participants, including session chairs, authors, and workshop and panel session organizers and speakers. IEEE NonMember Member Int’l Microwave Symposium ADVANCE REGISTRATION All IMS Sessions All registrants who select the IEEE member rates will be required to produce their current IEEE membership cards upon check-in at the conference. Registrants who do not have their current IEEE membership cards at check-in will be charged non-member rates. Reduced rates are offered for advance registration when received by May 5, 2005. A registration form is available on page 9 of this program. Each registrant must submit a separate form, with payment, to the address shown at the bottom of the registration form. If using a credit card, then fax and online registration is available. When mailing, please mail early to ensure receipt by the deadline; otherwise, on-site fees will apply. Individual remittance must accompany the registration form and is payable in US dollars only, using personal check drawn on a US bank, traveler’s check, international money order or credit card (MasterCard, VISA or American Express). Personal checks must be encoded at the bottom with the bank number, account number and check number. Bank drafts, wire transfers and cash are unacceptable and will be returned. Government or company purchase orders will not be accepted and will be returned. (Includes Exhibits, Abstract Book and IMS CD ROM) $480 All IMS Sessions $715 $415 $585 (Includes Exhibits, Abstract Book no IMS CD ROM) Single Day $250 $350 (Includes Exhibits, Abstract Book and IMS CD ROM) Student, Retiree, Life Member $75 $150 (Includes Exhibits, Abstract Book and IMS CD ROM) RFIC SYMPOSIUM (Mon. & Tue.) $250 $360 $65 $90 (Includes Exhibits, RFIC Sessions & Reception, RFIC Digest and CD ROM) RFIC Reception Only ARFTG Conference (Fri.) (Includes Exhibits, Breakfast, Lunch, Digest and ARFTG Exhibition. Member rates available to ARFTG or IEEE members.) ARFTG Conference ARFTG Student, Retiree $235 $150 $365 $150 Additional Digests and CD ROMs (on-site pickup only) IMS and ARFTG CD ROM RFIC Digest RFIC CD ROM ARFTG Digest Workshop CD ROM I (Sun./Mon.) Workshop CD ROM II (Mon./Fri.) GUEST REGISTRATION To preregister your guest, include his or her name on your registration form. Guest badges will be included in the envelope that you will receive upon check-in. On-site guest registration also will be available. Optional Box Lunches for Panel Sessions $65 $75 $65 $50 $65 $65 $130 $90 $130 $75 $130 $130 $20 $20 STUDENTS, RETIREES AND LIFE MEMBERS Awards Banquet (Wed. Evening) $65 $90 Students, retirees and IEEE Life Members receive a substantial discount on the IMS registration fee. Digests are not included. To qualify as a student, a registrant must be either a student member of IEEE or a full-time student carrying a course load of at least nine credit hours. ARFTG also provides discounts for students and retirees. Exhibits Only $20 $20 Guest Programs (See page 72 for complete information.) GSA: GSB: GSC: GSD: GSE: PRESS REGISTRATION Credentialed press representatives are welcome to register on-site only at the Exhibitor Counter, without cost and thereby have access to technical sessions and exhibits. Digests are not included. The Press Room is located in Room 304. Getty Museum Tour (Half Day) A Day in San Juan Capistrano (Full Day) Pasadena and the Huntington (Full Day) Exploring Long Beach (Full Day) Long Beach Multi-cultural Tour (Full Day) Workshops/ Tutorials ON-SITE REGISTRATION IEEE Member NonMember Student/Retiree Life Member $200 $150 $300 $225 $135 $100 Full Day Half Day On-site registration for all Microwave Week events will be available at the Long Beach Convention Center. Registration hours are: Saturday, June 11 2:00 PM–6:00 PM Sunday, June 12 7:00 AM–6:00 PM Monday, June 13 7:00 AM–5:00 PM Tuesday, June 14 7:00 AM–5:00 PM Wednesday, June 15 7:00 AM–5:00 PM Thursday, June 16 7:00 AM–3:00 PM Friday, June 17 7:00 AM–9:00 AM $65 $90 $90 $60 $70 REFUND POLICY Written requests received by May 5, 2005 will be honored. Refund requests postmarked after this date and on-site refunds will be granted ONLY if an event is cancelled. This policy applies to registrations for the symposium sessions, workshops, tutorials, digests, extra CD-ROMS, panel sessions, awards banquet and guest programs. Please state the pre-registrant’s name and provide a mailing address for the refund check; if registration was paid by credit card, refund will be made through an account credit. Account number must be provided if the initial registration was done on-line. Address your requests to: MTT-S Registration, 685 Canton St., Norwood, MA 02062. ON-SITE WORKSHOP REGISTRATION On-site registration on Saturday and Sunday is available to everyone. On-site registration for Friday’s workshops will be available from 7:00 to 9:00 AM on Friday for those who have not previously registered. ON-SITE ARFTG REGISTRATION Late on-site ARFTG registration will be available at the Long Beach Convention Center on Friday from 7:00 to 9:00 AM. If at all possible, please preregister earlier in the week to reduce the onsite workload. 13 2005 IEEE RADIO FREQUENCY INTEGRATED CIRCUIT (RFIC) SYMPOSIUM RFIC STEERING COMMITTEE Joseph Staudinger, General Chair Stefan Heinen, TPC Co-Chair Luciano Boglione, TPC Co-Chair Albert Jerng, Digest & CD-ROM David Ngo, Transactions Jenshan Lin, Finance Tina Quach, Publicity Jacques C. Rudell, Invited Papers Derek Shaeffer, Special Sessions Larry Kushner, Secretary Yann Deval, Workshops Takao Inoue, Web Master Larry Whicker, Conference Coordinator On behalf of the Technical Program Committee, welcome to the 2005 IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits (RFIC) Symposium. The RFIC Symposium is a leading edge IEEE technical conference dedicated to the advancement of integrated circuits and sub-systems for RF and communications systems. The RFIC Symposium begins on Sunday, June 12th with workshops and tutorials addressing RF technology, design and simulation, at both system and circuit level. The Plenary Session will be held on Sunday evening, right after the workshops. Two leading experts will share their own views during Sunday evening’s plenary session: Jerry Neal, Co-founder and Vice President, RF Micro Devices, will talk about “Integration Technologies: Cellular and Beyond”; Ed Healy, Vice President of Silicon Laboratories, will disStefan Heinen cuss “The Drive for Integration.” The RFIC reception will follow the plenary session to allow for everyone to relax and discuss the industry outlook among friends. The regular technical program begins on Monday featuring invited and submitted technical papers. A Panel Session entitled “CMOS PAs Step on the GaAs!” will take place during lunch on Monday and it is posed to allow for many interactive discussions with the audience! Another panel session on Tuesday, “3G Handsets – Too Much Power in Your Hands?,” will have panelists from both industry and academia offer their views on the challenges ahead. The interactive forum on Tuesday afternoon also gives attendees a further oppportunity to meet one-on-one with authors. In all, the RFIC symposium features 25 technical sessions, an interactive forum, 160 presentations, workshops, panel sessions and tutorials. The interest in RFIC technology, and the venue offered by the Symposium Luciano Boglione to showcase the latest advancements, continues to grow as evidence by a record number of papers submitted to this year’s conference. The 2005 Technical Program Committee keeps working diligently toward the goal of strengthening the technical quality and breadth of the program, to maintain and improve the legacy left by the previous Symposia. This would not be possible without attracting the professional in the field. We would like to thank all the authors for submitting their work to the RFIC conference: this truly exciting program would not be possible without their efforts! Advisory Board Fazal Ali Natalino Camilleri Eliot Cohen Reynold Kagiwada Sayfe Kiaei Mahesh Kumar Louis Liu Steve Lloyd Dave Lovelace Vijay Nair Kenneth O RFIC TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE Walid Ali-Ahmad, AUB/MAXIM Integrated Products Kirk Ashby, Microtune Inc. Bertan Bakkaloglu, Arizona State University Didier Belot, ST Microelectronics Georg Boeck, Berlin University of Technology Sudipto Chakraborty, Texas Instruments Glenn Chang, MaxLinear Yuhua Cheng, Skyworks Solutions Thomas Cho, Marvell Stephen Dow, ON Semiconductor Werner Geppert, Infineon Technologies Ranjit Gharpurey, University of Michigan Aditya Gupta, Anadigics Andre Hanke, Infineon Frank Henkel, IMST GmbH Wang Huei, National Taiwan University Stavros Iezekiel, University of Leeds Kursad Kiziloglu, Intel Corp. Kevin Kobayashi, Sirenza Microdevices Kevin Kornegay, Cornell University Larry Kushner, Kenet Inc. Ting-Ping Liu, Winbond Electronics Corp. Stefan Heinen and Luciano Boglione RFIC Technical Program Committee Chairs 2005 IEEE RFIC Symposium Kevin McCarthy, University College Cork Srenik Mehta, Atheros Communications Jyoti Mondal, Freescale Semiconductor Tadao Nakagawa, NTT Corp. Dan Nobbe, Peregrine Semiconductor Jeffrey Ou, Intel Allen Podell, Podell Consulting Sanjay Raman, Virginia Tech Madhukar Reddy, Skyworks Solutions Inc. Bill Redman-White, Philips Semiconductors/ Southampton University Eli Reese, TriQuint Semiconductor Pallavi Sandhiya, Filtronic Sigtek Marko Sokolich, HRL Laboratories LLC Noriharu Suematsu, Mitsubishi Electric Bruce Thompson, Motorola Labs Freek van Straten, Philips Semiconductors Albert Wang, Illinois Institute of Technology Patrick Yue, Carnegie Mellon University RFIC PLENARY SESSIONS Integration Technologies: Cellular and Beyond By Jerry Neal, Co-founder and Vice President, RF Micro Devices The Drive for Integration By Ed Healy, Vice President of Silicon Laboratories Over the last decade, wireless connectivity has become a way of life. As the world’s highest volume consumer electronics product, the cellular phone is a leading driver of mobility. Consumers continue to demand cell phones that feature advanced capabilities, including web access, cameras and even television tuners, which require higher data rates. To accommodate this trend, handset manufacturers are focusing on incorporating these advanced functionalities into the cell phone, and they are looking to their semiconductor suppliers to provide more highly integrated components and complete system solutions that are smaller, better performing and more cost competitive. To drive these higher levels of integration and develop more complex, complete system solutions with optimal performance, RF Micro Devices specializes in using a combination of multiple process and packaging technologies. In addition, RF Micro Devices is honing its radio expertise beyond cellular to provide handset manufacturers multiple radios, including Bluetooth,® wireless LAN and GPS, all of which are forecast to populate cell phones and a proliferation of other wireless devices in the future. As the handset emerges as a platform for the convergence of communications applications, the requirements for smaller, easier-to-implement components are necessary in order to make room for application processors, display requirements and memory chips. Fully-integrated, mixed-signal ICs that offer high performance, flexibility and ease-of-use will continue to dominate the cellular handset market. Monolithic RF ICs in CMOS will enable the technology leap required to meet the challenging integration and cost savings goals of handset manufacturers. In a market ruled by the consumer, ease-of-use and continuous integration will become increasingly important to handset manufacturers who must deliver cost-effective and differentiated solutions quickly. Best-in-class components allow handset manufacturers to enjoy supply chain control and flexibility as well as faster design cycles. Semiconductor companies that succeed in the cellular market will abandon incremental levels of integration that require multiple discretes, opting rather for revolutionary, first of a kind innovations that push the boundaries of design resulting in integrated, easy-to-use, high performance solutions. About Jerry D. Neal: About Ed Healy: Jerry D. Neal, the company’s executive vice president of marketing and strategic development and co-founder, has over 30 years experience in the RF and wireless industry. After obtaining his college education at Gaston Technical Institute and North Carolina State University, Mr. Neal continued his education in the area of computer technology during his employment with Hewlett-Packard. An entrepreneur at heart, Mr. Neal founded Moisture Control Systems, which he later sold to Hancor, Inc. Before cofounding RF Micro Devices, he broadened his exposure to sales and technical business aspects at Analog Devices. Ed Healy has served as vice president focused on wireless products since 1998. Prior to Silicon Laboratories, Mr. Healy worked as general manager of the Magnetic Storage Division at Crystal Semiconductor/Cirrus Logic. Mr. Healy also held various senior marketing and product planning positions for Zilog, a designer and manufacturer of application specific standard products, and GEC Plessey Semiconductor. Additionally, Mr. Healy was an assistant professor of electrical engineering at the United States Military Academy after serving as an infantry officer. Mr. Healy holds a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the United States Military Academy, a master’s degree in electrical engineering from Georgia Institute of Technology and a master’s degree in management from Stanford University. 14 2005 RFIC TECHNICAL PROGRAM — MONDAY, JUNE 13, 2005 RMO1A Cellular Transmitters — LBCC 101 Chair: F. Ali, Nokia • Co-chair: A. Hanke, Infineon 8:00 AM: RMO1A-1: Invited: A Quad-band 8PSK/GMSK Polar Transceiver A.W. Hietala, RF Micro Devices 8:20 AM: RMO1A-2: Invited: Polar Loop Transmitter for GSM/GPRS/EDGE T. Sowlati, D. Rozenblit, R. Pullela, M. Damgaard, D. Koh, D. Ripley, E. McCarthy, F. Balteanu, I. Gheorghe, K. Juan, S. Wloczysiak, D. Firoiu, Skyworks 8:40 AM: RMO1A-3: A Highly Integrated CMOS Zero-IF Transmitter for Cellular CDMA Applications J. Zhou, W. Sheng, X. Zhang, N. Kim, J. Woolfrey, M. Margarit, S. Vora, C. Persico, Qualcomm Inc. 9:00 AM: RMO1A-4: A Digital-to-RF-Amplitude Converter for GSM/GPRS/EDGE in 90 nm Digital CMOS P. Cruise, C-M. Hung, R.B. Staszewski, O. Eliezer, S. Rezeq, D. Leipold, K. Maggio, Wireless Analog Technology Center, Texas Instruments Inc. 9:20 AM: RMO1A-5: A 1 GHz CMOS Current-Folded Direct Digital RF Quadrature Modulator Y. Zhou, J. Yuan, Institute for Infocomm Research, Competence Center for Circuit Design, Dept. of Electroscience, Lund University RMO1B Small Signal LNAs — LBCC 102A/B Chair: A. Podell, Consultant • Co-chair: V. Nair, Intel Corp. 8:00 AM: RMO1B-1: A CMOS 5 GHz Micro-Power LNA H-H. Hsieh, L-H. Lu, National Taiwan University 8:20 AM: RMO1B-2: A Sub-mW 960 MHz Ultra-Wideband CMOS LNA Stanley B.T. Wang, A.M. Niknejad, R.W. Brodersen, Berkeley Wireless Research Center, Dept. of EECS, UC Berkeley 8:40 AM: RMO1B-3: A 3–10 GHz Bandwidth Low-Noise and Low-Power Amplifier for FullBand UWB Communications in 0.25 µm SiGe BiCMOS Technology N. Shiramizu, T. Masuda, K. Washio, Central Research Lab, Hitachi Ltd.; M. Tanabe, Renesas Northern Japan Semiconductor Inc. 9:00 AM: RMO1B-4: An ESD-Protected, 2.45/5.25 GHz Dual-Band CMOS LNA with Series LC Loads and a 0.5 V Supply S. Hyvonen, Intel Corp.; K. Bhatia, E. Rosenbaum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 9:20 AM: RMO1B-5: 18–26 GHz Low-Noise Amplifiers Using 130 and 90 nm Bulk CMOS Technologies S-C. Shin, S-F. Lai, K-Y. Lin, M-D. Tsai, H. Wang, National Taiwan University; C-S. Chang, Y-C. Tsai, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. RMO1C CMOS RF Device Technology — LBCC 102C Chair: J. Ou, Intel • Co-chair: A. Gupta, Anadigics 8:00 AM: RMO1C-1: Invited: Scalability of RF CMOS C.P. Yue, Dept. of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Carnegie-Mellon University; S.S. Wong, Electrical Engineering Dept., Stanford University 8:20 AM: RMO1C-2: Invited: RF FET Layout and Modeling for Design Success in RFCMOS Technologies B. Jagannathan, D. Greenberg, R. Anna, X. Wang, J. Pekarik, M. Breitwisch, M. Erturk, L. Wagner, C. Schnabel, D. Sanderson, S. Csutak, SRDC, IBM Microelectronics 8:40 AM: RMO1C-3: Properties of RFLDMOS with Low Resistive Substrate for Handset Power Applications J. Ko, S. Lee, H. Oh, J. Jeong, D. Baek, K. Koh, I. Son, Samsung Electronics; J. Han, S.Hong, KAIST 9:00 AM: RMO1C-4: Intermodulation Linearity Characteristics of CMOS Transistors in a 0.13 µm Process G. Niu, J. Pan, X. Wei, Auburn University; S.S. Taylor, Intel; D. Sheridan, IBM 9:20 AM: RMO1C-5: Analysis and Modeling of LNA Circuit Reliability E. Xiao, University of Texas at Arlington RMO1D Wideband Communications Circuits and Systems — LBCC 103A/B Chair: J.C. Rudell, Berkana Wireless Co-chair: A. Wang, Illinois Institute of Technology 8:00 AM: RMO1D-1: Invited: Integrated TV Tuner Design for Multi-standard Terrestrial Reception I. Mehr, Analog Devices 8:20 AM: RMO1D-2: A New Integrated Monocycle Generator and Transmitter for Ultrawideband (UWB) Communications M. Regis, F. Pourchet, ACCO S.A.; A. Azakkour, LISIF - Université Pierre et Marie Curie; G. Alquié, Cedex 8:40 AM: RMO1D-3: A 3.1–10.6 GHz Ultra-Wideband Pulse-Shaping Mixer D.D. Wentzloff, A.P. Chandrakasan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 9:00 AM: RMO1D-4: A Wide-band Low-crosstalk Switch-matrix and Output Buffer for DVB-S Applications T. Copani, University of Catania; G. Girlando, S. Smerzi, A. Castorina, G. Palmisano, STMicroelectronics 9:20 AM: RMO1D-5: Design of 24 GHz SiGe HBT Balanced Power Amplifier for System-on-aChip Ultra-wideband Applications N. Kinayman, A. Jenkins, D. Helms, R.I. Gresham, M/A-COM, a Tyco Electronics company RMO2A Challenges in RF IC Design — LBCC 101 Chair: S. Heinen, RWTH Aachen University • Co-chair: L. Boglione, Filtronics 10:10 AM: RMO2A-1: Invited: RF ICs at Millimeter-waves and Beyond T.H. Lee, Stanford University 10:30 AM: RMO2A-2: Invited: 17 GHz Transceiver Design in 0.13 µm CMOS M. Tiebout, C. Sandner, H-D. Wohlmuth, M. Berry, A.L. Scholtz, Infineon Technologies AG; C. Kienmayer R. Thringer, Technical University of Vienna 10:50 AM: RMO2A-3: Invited: Challenges in RF Simulation K.S. Kundert, Cadence Design Systems 11:10 AM: RMO2A-4: Invited: RF Integrated Feedback Circuits Using On-chip Magnetics J.R. Long, Electronics Research Laboratory/DIMES, Delft University of Technology 11:30 AM: RMO2A-5: Invited: Redundant MEMS Resonators for Precise Reference Oscillators E.P. Quevy, R.T. Howe, University of California at Berkeley RMO2B Advanced VCO Techniques — LBCC 102A/B Chair: A. Jerng, MIT • Co-chair: Y. Deval, IXL lab 10:10 AM: RMO2B-1: A First RF Digitally-controlled Oscillator for Mobile Phones R.B. Staszewski, C-M. Hung, N. Barton, M-C. Lee, D. Leipold, Wireless Analog Technology Center, Texas Instruments Inc. 10:30 AM: RMO2B-2: A Sub-100 µW 1.9 GHz CMOS Oscillator Using FBAR Resonator Y.H. Chee, A.M. Niknejad, J. Rabaey, Berkeley Wireless Research Center, Dept. of EECS, University of California at Berkeley 10:50 AM: RMO2B-3: A 26 GHz Coplanar Stripline-based Current Sharing CMOS Oscillator H. Krishnaswamy, H. Hashemi, University of Southern California 11:10 AM: RMO2B-4: A Low Phase Noise 52 GHz Push-push VCO in 0.18 µm Bulk CMOS Technologies Y-H. Cho, M-D. Tsai, H-Y. Chang, C-C. Chang, H. Wang, National Taiwan University 11:30 AM: RMO2B-5: A 5 GHz pHEMT Transformer-coupled VCO P.W. Lai, S.I. Long, ECE Dept., University of California, Santa Barbara RMO2C Active Device Modeling — LBCC 102C Chair: Y. Cheng, Siliconlinx Inc. • Co-chair: F. Henkel, IMST GmbH 10:10 AM: RMO2C-1: Invited: Next Generation CMOS Compact Models for RF and Microwave Applications A.M. Niknejad, C.H. Doan, S. Emami, M. Dunga, X. Xi, J. He, R. Brodersen, C. Hu, Berkeley Wireless Research Center, UC Berkeley 10:30 AM: RMO2C-2: A Lossy Substrate Model for Sub-100 nm, Super-100 GHz fT RF CMOS Noise Extraction and Modeling J.C. Guo, Y.M. Lin, Dept. of Electronics Engineering, National Chiao Tung Univ. 10:50 AM: RMO2C-3: A Large-signal Model of RF LDMOS with Skin Effects of Power Combining Structures J. Han, C. Park, S. Hong, KAIST; D. Baek, K. Koh, J. Ko, I. Shon, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. 11:10 AM: RMO2C-4: An Improved Silicon RF LDMOSFET Model with a New Extraction Method for Nonlinear Drift Resistance K. Lee, J. Yoon, J. Yim, J. Kang, B. Kim, Pohang Unversity of Science and Technology; D. Baek, S. Lee, I. Shon, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. 11:30 AM: RMO2C-5: Modeling RF MOSFETs After Electrical Stress Using Low Noise Microstrip Line Layout H.L. Kao1, J.M. Lai1, C.F. Lee1, K.C. Chiang1, S.P. McAlister, Dept. of Elect. Eng., Nat’l ChiaoTung Univ.; A. Chin, G.S. Samudra, SNDL, Dept. of Elec. Eng. RMO2D CMOS Mixers — LBCC 103A/B Chair: W.Y. Ali-Ahmad, AUB/Maxim • Co-chair: S. Kiaei, ASU, Connection One 10:10 AM: RMO2D-1: A 60 GHz Down-converting CMOS Single-gate Mixer S. Emami, C.H. Doan, A.M. Niknejad, R.W. Brodersen, Berkeley Wireless Research Center, Dept. of EECS, University of California, Berkeley 10:30 AM: RMO2D-2: Ultra-Low-Voltage Mixer and VCO in 0.18 µm CMOS H-H. Hsieh, K-S. Chung, L-H. Lu, National Taiwan University 10:50 AM: RMO2D-3: A Low-IF CMOS Double Quadrature Mixer Exhibiting 58 dB of Image Rejection for Silicon M. Notten, Philips Research; J. van Sinderen, F.Seneschal, F.Mounaim, Philips Semiconductors 11:10 AM: RMO2D-4: A New 0.25 µm CMOS Doubly Balanced Sub-harmonic Mixer for 5 GHz ISM Band Direct Conversion Receiver P. Upadhyaya, M. Rajashekharaiah, D. Heo, Washington State University, The School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; Y-J. Emery Chen, National Taiwan University, Department of Electrical Engineering 11:30 AM: RMO2D-5: A Wide-band Mixer for WCDMA/CDMA2000 in 90 nm Digital CMOS Process S. Peng, C.C. Chen, Texas Instruments; A. Bellaouar, Sirific Corp. 15 2005 RFIC TECHNICAL PROGRAM — MONDAY, JUNE 13, 2005 RMO3A WLAN Systems and Architectures — LBCC 101 Chair: D. Shaeffer, Aspendos Communications • Co-chair: N. Camilleri, RFWDS 1:20 PM: RMO3A-1: Invited: Circuit Implications of MIMO Technology for Advanced Wireless Local Area Networks W.J. Choi, Q. Sun, J.M. Gilbert, Atheros Communications Inc. 1:40 PM: RMO3A-2: A 1.4 V, 13.5 mW, 10/100 MHz 6th Order Elliptic Filter/VGA with DC-Offset Correction in 90 nm CMOS M. Elmala, B. Carlton, R. Bishop, K. Soumyanath, Communications Circuits Lab, Intel Corp. 2:00 PM: RMO3A-3: Low Power Consumption 2.4 GHz WLAN Front-end Module for a Multiple Radio Handset C-W.P. Huang, W. Vaillancourt, A. Parolin, C. Zelley, SiGe Semiconductor 2:20 PM: RMO3A-4: A Fully Integrated Receiver Front-end Reconfigured by PLL S.H. Han, C.S. Kim, M.Y. Park, H.K. Yu, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) 2:40 PM: RMO3A-5: A 5 GHz Direct-conversion Receiver with I/Q Phase and Gain Error Calibration W-Z. Chen, T-L. Lee, T-Y. Lu, Integrated Circuits and System Lab, Innovative Package Research Center, Department of Electronics Engineering, National Chiao-Tung University RMO3B Frequency Generation Circuits II: PLLs and Synthesizers — LBCC 102A/B Chair: B. Bakkaloglu, Arizona State University Co-chair: K.T. Kornegay, Cornell University 1:20 PM: RMO3B-1: A sub-1 psrms Jitter 1–5 GHz 0.13 µm CMOS PLL Using a Passive Feedforward Loop Filter with Noiseless Resistor Multiplication A. Maxim, M. Gheorghe, Crystal 1:40 PM: RMO3B-2: Bandwidth Extension of Low Noise Fractional-N Synthesizers S.E. Meninger, M.H. Perrott, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2:00 PM: RMO3B-3: A Fully Integrated Compact CMOS Fractional Signal Generator for GSM/WCDMA Dual-band Applications Y. Park, C.-H. Lee, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology 2:20 PM: RMO3B-4: A Fully Integrated GMSK Modulator using BiCMOS Sigma-Delta Frequency Synthesizer with Automatic Loop Gain Calibration H. Lee, P. Good, Skyworks Solutions Inc. RMO3C Front-end Design Techniques — LBCC 102C Chair: S. Chakraborty, Texas Instruments Inc Co-chair: K. Ashby, Microtune Inc 1:20 PM: RMO3C-1: Invited: Circuit Techniques for CMOS Multiple-antenna Transceivers D.J. Allstot, S. Aniruddhan, M. Chu, S. Shekhar, Univ. of Washington; G. Banerjee, J. Paramesh, Univ. of Washington/Intel Corp.; X. Li, K. Soumyanath, QualComm Corp. 1:40 PM: RMO3C-2: An Integrated LMS Adaptive Filter of TX Leakage for CDMA Receiver Front Ends V. Aparin, G. Ballantyne, C. Persico, A. Cicalini, Qualcomm Inc. 2:00 PM: RMO3C-3: Experimental Results at 1 GHz on Linearizing an NMOS Transistor with a Parallel PMOS Transistor T.P. Weldon, D.T. Lieu, M.J. Davis, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 2:20 PM: RMO3C-4: A 13 dB IIP3 Improved Low-power CMOS RF Programmable Gain Amplifier Using Differential Circuit Transconductance Linearization T.W. Kim, K. Lee, Dept. of EECS, KAIST; B. Kim, Y. Cho, B. Kim, Integrant Technologies Inc. 2:40 PM: RMO3C-5: Using Auxiliary Amplifier to Cancel Third-order Intermodulation Distortion for A 1.9 GHz CMOS Linear Amplifier Design K-H. Liang, C-C. Ho, M-W. Hsieh, Y-J. Chan, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, National Central University RMO3D Efficiency Improvement Topologies — LBCC 103A/B Chair: T. Quach, Freescale Inc. • Co-chair: D. Ngo, RF Micro Devices Inc. 1:20 PM: RMO3D-1: A 20 mA Quiescent Current 40% PAE WCDMA HBT Power Amplifier Module with Reduced Current Consumption Under Backoff Power Operation G. Hau, S. Caron, J. Turpel, B. MacDonald, Fairchild Semiconductor Corp. 1:40 PM: RMO3D-2: A SiGe PA with Dual Dynamic Bias Control and Memoryless Digital Predistortion for WCDMA Handset Applications J. Deng, P.S. Gudem, L.E. Larson, D. Kimball and P.M. Asbeck, Center for Wireless Communications, Dept. of ECE, UC San Diego 2:00 PM: RMO3D-3: Linear RF CMOS Power Amplifier with Improved Efficiency and Linearity in Wide Power Levels N. Srirattana, P. Sen, C-H. Lee, P.E. Allen, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology; H-M. Park, Maxim Integrated Circuits 2:20 PM: RMO3D-4: A Single-chip Variable Supply Voltage Power Amplifier I.A. Rippke, Xpedion Design Systems Inc.; J.S. Duster, K.T. Kornegay, Cornell University 2:40 PM: RMO3D-5: A New Series-Type Doherty Amplifier for Miniaturization J. Jung, U. Kim, J. Jeon, J. Kim, Y. Kwon, Seoul National University; K. Kang, Wavics Co. Ltd. RMO4A RF Transceivers for 2G & 3G Systems — LBCC 101 Chair: M. Reddy, MaxLinear Inc. • Co-chair: D. Belot, ST Microelectronics 3:30 PM: RMO4A-1: Invited: Digital RF CMOS Transceivers for GPRS and EDGE C. Monker, B-U. Klepser, Infineon Technologies; B. Neurauter, C. Mayer, DICE GmbH & Co. KG 3:50 PM: RMO4A-2: A Fully Integrated Inter-stage-bandpass-filterless Direct-conversion Receiver for W-CDMA M. Tamura, T. Nakayama, Y. Hino, A. Yoshizawa, K. Takagi, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Japan Inc. 4:10 PM: RMO4A-3: Compact Radio System Module for Triple-band GSM Cellular Phones H. Okabe, T. Ido, Hitachi Ltd.; T. Endo, Renesas Technology Corp. 4:30 PM: RMO4A-4: A 1.9 GHz SiGe BiCMOS PHS Transceiver with an Integrated PA and a Fast Settling PLL M.A.I. Mostafa, C.K. Quek, A.E. Moznine, W. Roberts, M. Romney, D. Walker, D. Stegmeir, K. Tran, N. King, S. Farahvash, R. Koupal, Micro Linear Corp. 4:50 PM: RMO4A-5: Invited: A Tri-band (2100/1900/800 MHz) Single-chip Cellular Transceiver for WCDMA/HSDPA D. Kaczman, C. Dozier, N. Godambe, H. Guimaraes, M. Shah, M. Rachedine, M. Alam, L. Han, W. Shepherd, D. Cashen, J. Ganger, K. Couglar, B. Getka, E. Brotkowski, Freescale Semiconductor RMO4B Passive Modeling, De-embedding and Design Methodology — LBCC 102A/B Chair: K. McCarthy, University College Cork Co-chair: P. Yue, Carnegie Mellon University 3:30 PM: RMO4B-1: Invited: Analog RF Model Development With Verilog-A B. Troyanovsky, P. O’Halloran, M. Mierzwinski, Tiburon Design Automation 3:50 PM: RMO4B-2: Characterization, Design, Modeling and Model Validation of Silicon OnWafer M:N Balun Components Under Matched and Un-Matched Con F. Rotella, G. Tkachenko, Y. Cheng, Skyworks Solutions 4:10 PM: RMO4B-3: Modeling Methodology of Integrated Five-port Balun Using Two-port RF Measurement K-Y. Huang, C-J. Hsu, L-Y. Leu, Winbond Electronics Corp. 4:30 PM: RMO4B-4: A Decomposition and Reconstruction Scheme for Broadband Modeling of On-chip Passive Components Using Modified T-equivalent Circuit T.S. Horng, J.K. Jau, Y.S. Tsai, C.S. Huang, Department of Electrical Engineering, National Sun Yat-Sen University RMO4C Optical System ICs and Architectures — LBCC 102C Chair: L. Liu, Northrop Grumman • Co-chair: K. Kiziloglu, Intel Corp. 3:30 PM: RMO4C-1: 1V, 10 mW, 10 Gb/s CMOS Optical Receiver Front-end D. Guckenberger, D. Kucharski, K.T. Kornegay, Cornell University; J.D. Schaub, IBM Austin Research Lab 3:50 PM: RMO4C-2: A 3.3V 10 Gb/s SiGe Limiting Transimpedance Amplifier Using a Pseudodifferential Input and a Limiting Cherry-hooper Stage A. Maxim, Maxim Integrated Products, Fiber Communications Div. 4:10 PM: RMO4C-3: Low Power Consumption 10 Gb/s SiGe Modulator Drivers with 9 Vpp Differential Output Swing Using Intrinsic Collector-base Capacitanc D-U. Li, L-R. Huang, C-M. Tsai, SoC Technology Center, Industrial Technology Research Institute 4:30 PM: RMO4C-4: High Voltage Swing and High Data Rate Multiplexers in SiGe Technology M. Wurzer, H. Knapp, T.F. Meister, Infineon Technologies AG 4:50 PM: RMO4C-5: An 80 Gb/s 2.7 Vp-p Driver IC Based on Functional Distributed Circuits for Optical Transmission Systems Y. Suzuki, Z. Yamazaki, H. Hida, System Devices Research Laboratories, NEC Corp. RMO4D UWB — LBCC 103A/B Chair: S. Mehta, Atheros Communications Co-chair: D. Lovelace, PropheSi Technologies Inc. 3:30 PM: RMO4D-1: Invited: Design Challenges in Emerging Broadband Wireless Systems R. Gharpurey, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan 3:50 PM: RMO4D-2: A 5.4 mW LNA Using 0.35 µm SiGe BiCMOS Technology for 3.1–10.6 GHz UWB Wireless Receivers M-D. Tsai, K-Y. Lin, H. Wang, National Taiwan University 4:10 PM: RMO4D-3: A 0.25 mm CMOS Ultra-wideband Amplifier for Time-Domain UWB Applications X. Guan,C. Nguyen, Texas A&M University 4:30 PM: RMO4D-4: A 3.1–10.6 GHz RF Front-end for MultiBand UWB Wireless Receivers B. Shi, Y.W. Chia, Institute for Infocomm Research 4:50 PM: RMO4D-5: A Low Power Noncoherent CMOS UWB Transceiver ICs Y. Zheng, W.G. Yeoh, Institute of Microelectronics, Y-P. Xu, F. Lin, National University of Singapore; Y. Tong, J. Yan, Institute of Microelectronics/National University of Singapore 4:50 PM: RMORB-5: A Fully-scalable De-embedding Method for On-wafer S-parameter Characterization of CMOS RF/Microwave Devices M.H. Cho, C.S. Chiu, G.. Huang, Y.M. Teng, L.H. Chang, K.M. Chen, National Nano Device Labs [Tuesday Sessions continued on page 76] 16 TSC: MONOLITHIC DISTRIBUTED POWER MANAGEMENT FOR NEXT GENERATION WIRELESS APPLICATION Date & Time: Sunday, June 12; 8:00 AM–12:00 PM These tutorials are targeted for people who are new to microwave design or new to specific technical areas. Each starts with basics to help you “impedance match” into the topic and help you understand papers on these topics later in Microwave Week. Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ Monolithic Power Management Circuits and Applications for RF Transceivers – Overview, S. Abedinpour, Freescale Inc. ✗ Power Management for High Spectral Purity RF Synthesizers, B. Bakkaloglu, Texas Instruments ✗ DC/DC converters and Noise Shaping Techniques for Switched-Mode DC/DC Converters for RF Transceivers, S. Kiaei, Connection One, ASU ✗ Design of Microfabricated Transformers and Inductors for High-Frequency Power Conversion, A. Lotfi, Enpirion Inc. ✗ Adaptive Power Management for RF Power Amplifiers, G. Rincon-Mora, Georgia Institute of Technology, Analog Consortium TSA: FILTER I: RF AND MICROWAVE FILTER DESIGN Date & Time: Sunday, June 12; 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203 Organizer: H. Clark Bell, HF Plus Sponsor: MTT-8: Filters and Passive Components This course will present design basics for passive RF and microwave filters. Included will be discussions of performance parameters, types of filter responses, estimating filter performance, characteristics of various filter technologies, specifying filters realistically to avoid surprises, and use of filter design software. Specific filter topics will include doubly-terminated twoport network chain parameters and scattering parameters; lowpass and highpass ladder networks and Chebyshev filter; immittance inverters and transformation to bandpass and bandstop coupled-resonator prototypes; narrow-band design using coupling bandwidth and loading bandwidth; relation of resonator Q, delay and loss, and effect of lossy coupling; TEM coupled line pair equivalent circuits; TEM resonator, combline and interdigital bandpass filters; TEM resonator bandstop filters; waveguide resonator bandpass filters; general coupled-resonator prototype; loss approximation, the elliptic function filter and approximate formulas; realization polynomials and immittances; bandpass filters with single negative or positive cross coupling; dual mode n = 4 and n = 8 filters; environmental effects on filter performance. Date & Time: Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102AB Topics & Speakers: ✗ An Overview of Mobile Radios’ RF System Architectures, W. Ali-Ahmad, Maxim ✗ Design of LNAs, D. Shaeffer, Aspendos Communications ✗ Design of Up and Down converters, S. Kiaei, ASU ✗ Design of Controlled Oscillators, F. Svelto, University of Pavia ✗ Design of Frequency Synthesizers, M. Perrott, MIT ✗ Design of Power Amplifiers, R. Gupta, Berkana Wireless ✗ Design of Duplexers, A. Cathelin, ST Microelectronics Y. Deval, IXL Lab D. Shaeffer, Aspendos Communications C. Rudell, Berkana Wireless Sponsors: MTT-23: RFIC RFIC Symposium Organizers: B. Bakkaloglu, Texas Instruments S. Abedinpour, Freescale Semiconductor S. Kiaei, Connection One Sponsors: MTT-23: RFIC RFIC Symposium As CMOS technology is rapidly moving towards deep submicron gate lengths, there are several new challenges for the design of RF and analog circuits. One of the main challenges is the drastic reduction on the supply voltage, which limits the linearity and the dynamic range, and increases the supply ripple sensitivity of RF circuits. With the reduction of the RF supply voltage, noise, ripple and cross-coupling on the power supply is playing a dominant role in the transceiver noise budget. Specifically, synthesizer and reference oscillator phase noise, LNA and mixer noise figure and the adjacent channel requirement of the PA is heavily influenced by the supply noise and spurious content. With increasing drive towards higher level of integration, lower cost, and longer battery life in RF applications, there is a need for efficient monolithic DC-DC power converters. This workshop summarizes the topology tradeoffs that are involved in the implementation of monolithic distributed power management circuits for future generation portable wireless applications. RF supply regulators require high power density, high energy efficiency, low noise and ripple, high PSRR at a wide frequency range, small size, and low cost. The advantages and application areas of low-dropout linear, switched-mode DC-DC converters are examined in light of these requirements. TSB: BASIC RFIC BUILDING BLOCKS Sunday, June 12; 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Organizers: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 This tutorial presents an overview of the design of integrated radiofrequency systems. The specific constraints of designing RFIC in low-cost silicon technologies will be highlighted. First, as a matter of introducing building blocks and their specifications, RF system architectures are described. Second, key building blocks are detailed, down to the transistor level. Device limitations due to the integration within silicon technologies are reviewed for each block. Last, reliability and test of highly integrated RF circuits are tackled. 17 SUNDAY SUNDAY TUTORIALS SUNDAY SUNDAY WORKSHOPS WSA: COMPETITIVENESS OF BROADBAND WIRELESS ACCESS (BWA) SYSTEMS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: ✗ Bandwidth-Enhanced CMOS Fractional-N Synthesizers, I. Galton, UC San Diego ✗ Future of MEMS in Full CMOS Radio, G. Rebeiz, UC San Diego Hyatt Regency A Organizers: W.Y. Ali-Ahmad, Maxim Integrated Products W. Khalil, Intel Corp. Sponsors: MTT-23, RFIC RFIC Symposium Topics & Speakers: ✗ BWA Competitiveness Issues, F. Ivanek, Stanford University ✗ WIMAX – Overview of WiMAX Forum Strategy and Plan, M. Shakouri, WiMAX Forum ✗ Emerging Chips for BWA Applications, R. Golshan, Fujitsu Microelectronics America ✗ Recent Developments in Broadband Wireless Access, S. Varma, Aperto Networks ✗ Status and Development of Broadband Wireless Access in Japan: Fixed, Mobile and Nomadic, A. Hashimoto, NTT DoCoMo ✗ 2.3 GHz Portable Internet (WiBro) for Wireless Broadband Access, D. Hong, Sogang University ✗ Wireless Access – Key to Broadband Internet in Rural India, M. Pitke, AXES Technologies ✗ Operators’ Choices among New BWA Standards, G. Marzocchi, Multiservices ✗ BWA Competitiveness in Brazil, S.E. Barbin, University of Sao Paulo ✗ Wireless Platform at High Altitude in the Stratosphere: Its Advantages and Trials, R. Miura, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology ✗ Role of Satellites for Broadband Wireless Access, R.K. Gupta, AM COM Communications Organizers: F. Ivanek, Stanford University G. Heiter, Heiter Microwave Consulting R. Gupta, AM COM Communications Sponsors: MTT-16, Microwave Systems MTT-19, Microwave Technology Business Issues MTT-20, Wireless Communications As CMOS technology is scaling down, the question poses itself: What is the future of all-CMOS radio on a chip? The concept of full CMOS radio is an evolving reality, and the motivation for this workshop is to present key technical issues and put forward recommendations for future enabling technologies and design ideas. The workshop explores the impact of transistor and supply scaling on all-CMOS RF and mixed-signal circuits. The allCMOS radio SoC (System-on-Chip) concept is compared against the all-CMOS SiP (System-in-Package) concept with stress on design challenges and on integration and cost issues. The major topics addressed in this workshop include reducing substrate noise effects in all-CMOS radio chip, future RF CMOS modeling, digital calibration of Fractional-N synthesizers and modulators, concepts of embedding high power CMOS PAs, power management circuits, and MEMS in full CMOS radio SoC. WSC: ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES FOR NEXT GENERATION RFICS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ Prospects on Silicon CMOS for High Frequency Application, J.D. Alamo, MIT ✗ BAW and MEMs above Silicon for RF Applications, P. Ancey, STMicroelectronics ✗ Bulk Acoustic Wave Filters and New Architectures for RF Applications, C. Enz, CSEM ✗ FBAR for RF Applications, R. Ruby, Agilent ✗ Advanced Technologies to Cover Future RF Applications Needs, M. H. Smith, Intel ✗ Bulk Acoustic Wave Filters for Mobile Cellular Communications, H.J. Timme, Infineon ✗ Impact of New Technologies for New RF Systems, C. Nguyen, DARPA ✗ Freescale’s RFIC Technologies – The Role of III-V and Si-Based Devices in Advanced RF Applications, M. Huang, Motorola Terrestrial fixed broadband wireless access (BWA) deployment in competition with wireline access systems using XDSL, cable modems or optical fiber is on the rise. The workshop will cover existing and emerging BWA systems with data rates ranging from Megabits/sec to Gigabits/sec, and will focus on the potential of WiMAX. Speakers from the Americas, Asia and Europe will address the key issues including market requirements and drivers, spectrum usage, technological progress, standardization and regulation, fixed-nomadic-mobile convergence, and the BWA potential of high altitude platform systems (HAPS) and satellite systems. The second half of the afternoon program is reserved for short ad hoc presentations by advance arrangement with the organizers, and for a general discussion with focus on BWA competitiveness and prospects. Date & Time: WSB: FULL CMOS RADIO Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Hyatt Regency B Long Beach Convention Center, Room 103AB Organizers: D. Belot, STMicroelectronics Y. Deval, IXL Lab D. Saias, STMicroelectronics Sponsors: MTT-23, RFIC RFIC Symposium New technologies are currently emerging, which will dramatically impact the design of radio frequency integrated circuits in the near future. Among them, the advent of Bulk Acoustic Wave (BAW) devices as well as Silicon On Insulator (SOI) industrial processes will undoubtedly open the way to a new era of RFIC System On Chip - assuming that the cost remains as low as possible and the reliability as high as possible. This workshop addresses different BAW technologies and approaches, emphasizing RF functions for which this device cannot be overlooked. SOI technologies will be addressed too, for their influence on high frequencies as well as low power consumption, and mixed-signal circuits. Finally, carbon nanotubes will be presented, as they might become an alternative to silicon transistors in the future. Topics & Speakers: ✗ Impact of Technology Scaling on Mixed Signal Design, C. Sodini, MIT ✗ Challenges in Design of Single Chip Radio for Cellular Communication Systems, S. Embabi, Sirific ✗ The Future of RF CMOS Modeling, A. Niknejad, UC Berkeley ✗ CMOS PAs, A. Hajimiri, Caltech ✗ New Dimensions in CMOS RF Technologies, D. Ham, Harvard University ✗ Full CMOS Radio: Design Issues and Challenges, A. Rofougaran, Broadcomm 18 Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 101AB ✗ MIMO WLAN Transceiver Concepts and Their Implication on the FEM Development, A. Biran, Intel Corp. ✗ Ultra-Compact WLAN FEMs for the High-Volume Wireless Mobile Market, P. Heide, EPCOS AG ✗ RF Silicon Integrated Passives (RFIPDs) for WLAN Applications, C.H. Wang, Telephus ✗ Laminate-Based RF Integrated Passive Front End Devices for WLAN Application, J. Chamberlin, JMD ✗ LTCC Front End Module for WLAN Application (IEEE 802.11a/b/g), S. Kemmochi, Hitachi Metals ✗ Small-Size WLAN Integrated Modules, K. Kato, Kyocera Corp. ✗ FEMs for Mobile/Cellular Applications, B. Hemish, P. Huang, SiGe Semiconductor P. Heide, EPCOS AG A. Biran, Intel Corp. C. Ruppel, EPCOS AG Sponsors: MTT-20, Wireless Communications MTT-16, Microwave Systems MTT-23, RF Integrated Circuits RFIC Symposium The WLAN market demonstrated enormous growth rates in the last few years. The WLAN market, like the cellular phone market, has seen strong component cost reductions, with simultaneous increase in the complexity of WLAN radio transceivers from single to multi-band/multi-mode solutions, coexistence with Bluetooth, novel cellular functions and, most recently, the realization of 802.11n and MIMO concepts. Apparently, the size of a WLAN radio transceiver RFIC and its adjacent FEM became a critical system-implementation factor. Wireless connectivity has become an embedded feature in mobile PCs, PDAs and smart phones, where the number of functions per sq. mm is the limiting functionality factor. Very small WLAN RFICs with form factors compatible with CF and SD cards, memory sticks and USB-interfaces have been introduced in 2004. Highly integrated FEM and single-chip radios have for the first time been applied to allow those innovative implementations. Most recently, the cellular industry has set the very challenging target of implementing a high-performance WLAN radio within 150 sq. mm (802.11g) and 250 sq. mm (802.11a + g). This will further drive the trend for higher integration levels, cost reduction, reliability and yield improvements. Sponsor: MTT-1, Computer-Aided Design WSF: ACCURACY OF SYSTEM-LEVEL FIGURES OF MERIT FOR WIRELESS APPLICATIONS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: Hyatt Regency C Topics & Speakers: ✗ System-Level Figures of Merit and Measurement Accuracy, R. Trott, Aeroflex ✗ Memory Effects and System-Level Figures of Merit: Limits on Digital Pre-Distortion, P. Draxler, Qualcomm & UCSD ✗ Power Measurements in Communications as a Figure of Merit, D. Adamson, NPL ✗ Advantages and Limits of Error Vector Usage in Performance Assessment of Wireless Systems and Apparatuses, L. Angrisani, Università di Napoli Federico II ✗ Error Vector Magnitude for 802.11a Systems, M.D. McKinley, K.A. Remley, RF Electronics Group, NIST WSE: IMPACT OF COMPONENT MODELING ON MICROWAVE AND MILLIMETER WAVE CIRCUIT PERFORMANCE Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: D. Schreurs, K.U.Leuven A. Beyer, Duisburg-Essen University S. Maas, Applied Wave Research The objective of this Workshop is to shed a light on the interactions happening in the chain leading to successful circuit designs. One obvious aspect is the propagation of Figures of Merit (FOMs) of passive and active components into microwave circuit performance. Technology reproducibility and quality of component models are two other key factors. The first part of the Workshop focuses on the component level. The usual FOMs (Q, fT, fMAX, FMIN…) supplemented by other requirements that are of high importance (low-power consumption, cost, area, level of integration…) are first reviewed. Trade-offs are illustrated by comparing several fabrication technologies of passive and active components. As example, the varying quality of a spiral inductor as processed on GaAs, bulk Si, back-end Si, and MCM-D substrates, is mentioned. Next, the interrelationships between model requirements and circuit specifications are addressed. An example is the necessity of having temperature-dependent models when designing power amplifiers, while this is optional in oscillator design. Due to the more complex modulation schemes on the system level, model requirements have become more stringent and now require validations, e.g. of EVM and ACPR predictability. The relative importance of these key technology and modeling indicators across the spectrum of microwave and millimeter-wave circuits (LNA, oscillator, PA, mixer...) is covered. Finally, participants are given the opportunity to share their views. Topics & Speakers: Organizers: Organizers: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102C Organizers: D. Adamson, NPL K. Remley, NIST J. Horton, J.B. Horton Group Sponsors: MTT-11, Microwave Measurements MTT-16, Microwave Systems MTT-20, Wireless Communications A clear need for improved accuracy in wireless measurements was identified in one of the workshop sessions at IMS 2004. This workshop will focus on the key system-level measurands that are used to determine the performance of wireless systems. The objective will be to present and discuss the current state of the art relating to accuracy of these measurands. The workshop will begin with an overview of system-level figures of merit and follow with more detailed presentations on several of the key measurands, presenting work from industry, academia and National Standards Laboratories. Topics & Speakers: ✗ On-Chip and In-Package Passive Component Integration, G. Carchon, IMEC ✗ Nonlinear Circuit Performance and FOMs, R. Trew, North Carolina State University ✗ Modeling Devices at Millimeter Wave Frequencies, J. East, University of Michigan ✗ Sensitivity of Linear Circuit Applications to Imperfect Component Models, A. Beyer, Duisburg-Essen University ✗ Relating Non-Linear Circuit Design Specifications to Properties of Component Models, S. Maas, Applied Wave Research 19 SUNDAY SUNDAY WORKSHOPS WSD: ADVANCED SYSTEM SOLUTIONS AND INTEGRATION TECHNOLOGIES FOR HIGH-VOLUME WIRELESS LAN APPLICATIONS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM SUNDAY SUNDAY WORKSHOPS WSG: CIRCUIT CHARACTERIZATION, MODELING AND TESTING: CAN IT REALLY BE DONE WITHOUT IMPEDANCE TUNERS? Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: noise in modulated fractional-N controllers will be introduced. This workshop summarizes the topology tradeoffs that are involved in the implementation of various RF CMOS blocks utilizing noise shaping methodologies, and their application for future generation portable wireless systems. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202 Topics & Speakers: WSI: ON-WAFER MICROWAVE MEASUREMENTS: STATE OF THE ART AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM ✗ Active and Passive Load Pull Systems: From the Basic to the Future of Variable Impedance Device Characterization, A. Ferrero ✗ Active Load Pull: Tuning of Active Devices under Modulated Excitation, P.J. Tasker ✗ Multi-Purpose, Multi-Probe Tuner for On-Wafer Harmonic Tuning, C. Tsironis ✗ Comments on Synthesis and Realization of Interstage Impedance Transformation Networks, J. Sevic ✗ Multiharmonic Active and Passive Load-Pull Characterization: A Helpful Tool for Designers? M. Tutt ✗ The Sense And Nonsense Of Load Pull, S. Cripps Organizer: M.V. Bossche Sponsor: MTT-11, Microwave Measurements Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ On-Wafer VNA Calibration, D.F. Williams, NIST ✗ Calibration Comparison and Applications, D.K. Walker, NIST ✗ On-Wafer Interconnect Characterization, U. Arz, PTB ✗ Repeatability and Reproducibility Across International Borders, N. Ridler, R.A. Dudley, NPL; U. Arz, D. Schubert, PTB ✗ Emerging On-Wafer Measurement Techniques for MMICs, R.A. Dudley, NPL; P. Hale, NIST At low frequencies, active sub-circuits are mainly designed with low or high impedance input/output stages, simplifying the realization of complete circuits and increasing the level of integration. At high frequencies, supported by S-parameters, most design techniques are based on matched circuit design. This is valid for smallsignal designs. But nowadays, small-signal design is not adequate anymore. Transistors are squeezed in performance and exercised by signals that result in nonlinear effects. Therefore S-parameter techniques are not adequate. Also, at the heart of the higher power systems are transistors that are far from matched in 50 Ω. Source and load pull techniques and systems have been developed to exercise a component under non 50 Ω conditions. This workshop starts with some presentations giving an overview of actual systems that synthesize both source and load impedances. Passive and active approaches are both highlighted. After an update of existing techniques, reflections are given on the usefulness of impedance tuning in the design of amplification chains, on the use of source and load-pull systems in combination with design tools. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 201B Topics & Speakers: B. Bakkaloglu, Texas Instruments S. Kiaei, Connection One Sponsors: MTT-23, RFIC RFIC Symposium U. Arz, PTB D. Williams, NIST R. Dudley, NPL Sponsors: MTT-11, Microwave Measurements 65th ARFTG Conference WSJ: PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION OF RF POWER AMPLIFIERS FOR CELLULAR BASE STATIONS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM ✗ Overview of Transmit and Linear PA Up-Converters, S. Kiaei, Connection One ✗ Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizers, I. Galton, UC San Diego ✗ Polar Modulation Methods for Power Amplifiers, T. Sowlati, Skyworks ✗ Algorithms and Amplifiers for Digital Generation of Microwave Signals with Time-Varying Envelope, P. Asbeck, J. Rode, I. Galton, L. Larson, UC San Diego Organizers: Organizers: A half-day workshop to address current state of the art onwafer device characterization using electrical and optical methods from commercial and research systems. The workshop begins with a review of on-wafer Vector Network Analyzer (VNA) calibration methods for two-port scattering parameter measurements, including a discussion of the merits of on- versus off-chip calibrations. Emphasis will be given to the treatment of losses in planar circuits, which necessitates an extension of scattering parameter definition derived from a general circuit theory. A quantitative method for comparing two given on-wafer calibrations will be discussed, highlighting the applications of this comparison method before moving on to measurement methods suitable for characterizing the frequency-dependent behavior of planar high-speed interconnects. The final part of the workshop will report on an international on-wafer S-parameter repeatability and reproducibility exercise conducted by two national laboratories using commercial equipment. The workshop will conclude with a discussion of techniques that offer alternative methods for on-wafer measurement such as electro-optic sampling and field mapping. WSH: NOISE SHAPING METHODS FOR RFIC DESIGN Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Location: Hyatt Regency C Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202 Topics & Speakers: ✗ Device Technologies for Cellular Base Station PAs, M. Feng, University of Illinois ✗ High Efficiency GaN Devices for WCDMA Base Station Applications, Y. Tateno, Eudyna Devices Inc. ✗ High-Voltage HBTs for Cellular Base Station PAs, L. Wang, Watkins ✗ Physics-Based and Scalable BSIM4 Models for LD-MOSFETs, J. Hwang, Lehigh University ✗ Distributed Effects of LDMOS PAs, K. Goverdhanam, Agere Systems ✗ Thermal Models for LD-MOSFETs, P. Roblin, Ohio University ✗ High Power and High Efficiency Balanced Amplifier Reference Design Implementation, C. Shih, Infineon This workshop presents noise shaping and digital signal processing techniques for RFIC Design. The tutorials will cover fundamentals of modulation and various noise shaping techniques, development of Direct Digital Synthesis modulators and design of fractional-N synthesizers. Tradeoffs between phase noise and loop bandwidth in conventional fractional phase-locked loops will be analyzed and various techniques to cancel excess phase 20 Sponsor: K. Goverdhanam, Agere Systems J. Hwang, Lehigh University P. Gammel, Agere Systems O. Lopez, Agere Systems WSL: MULTI-BAND, MULTI-MODE RFICS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM MTT-5, Microwave High-Power Techniques Topics & Speakers: Location: Wideband Front-End ICs and Their Compensation Techniques, T. Nakagawa, NTT Multi-Mode CMOS Transceivers And Architectures, T. Manku, Sirific Wireless Corp. Concurrent Multiband RFICs, H. Hashemi, University of Southern California ✗ Switched Multi-Mode Receiver ICs, J. Ryynänen, Helsinki University of Technology ✗ A Broadband SiGe Quadrature Mixer for 0.8–5.2 GHz Wireless Applications, N. Suematsu, Mitsubishi Electric RF power amplifiers (PAs) for third and later generations of cellular base stations such as those of UMTS, Edge, etc. remain a technical challenge. PA designs must meet stringent linearity requirements for multi-tone high peak-to-valley modulation operations. High-efficiency and thermally stable PAs are needed for tower-top locations. New packages such as those made of liquid crystal polymers promise low cost and near hermeticity. Alternative device technologies are desirable for higher-frequency operations but their cost and reliability are not proven. Non-proprietary device models are critical for foundry-independent and mixed-mode designs. Distributed and balanced amplifier designs can lessen the demand on device technology. The solutions for the technical challenges must be low cost, as unit price continues to erode. This workshop focuses on the above-mentioned challenges for practical implementation of RF power amplifiers for cellular base station applications. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102C Topics & Speakers: ✗ Mixed-Signal Integrated Circuit Design Methodology and Challenges, M. Sunori, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. ✗ The RF Bottleneck in Wireless Design, J. Hartung, Cadence Design System Inc. ✗ Early Verification of Emerging UWB and WMAN Radio Systems, T. Phillips, Agilent Technologies Organizers: A. Dengi, Cadence Design Systems Inc. W. Geppert, Infineon Technologies Sponsors: MTT-23, RFIC RFIC Symposium Organizers: T. Nakagawa, NTT N. Suematsu, Mitsubishi Electric Sponsors: MTT-23, RFIC RFIC Symposium Wireless communications, including 2G and 3G cellular, 2.4 and 5 GHz wireless LAN, Bluetooth and GPS, have proliferated rapidly. These forms of communication will not be confined to a single system. In fact, one of the main user requirements is to be able to connect to networks anytime, anywhere using the most suitable of all the various wireless systems available, according to the situation. This broad requirement has led to a demand for multi-band and multi-mode transceiver ICs. Even though such transceivers feature both multi-band and multi-mode operations, they must be small and economical and have low power consumption. There are various integrated approaches to multiband ICs, such as parallel RF paths, wideband circuits, multipass band circuits, tunable circuits and switching circuits. This half-day workshop will review these and other techniques for achieving multi-band and multi-mode RFICs, and discuss what the right approach is, in the light of RF performance and cost, at present and in the future. WSK: DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS AND TOOLS FOR THE SYSTEM LEVEL DESIGN OF RFICS Date & Time: Sunday, June 12, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 The complexity of communication systems is increasing with each generation of communications standards, e.g., 802.11a/b/g, 2G/2.5G/3G, etc. With deep submicron technologies, a significant part of a communication system can now be integrated into one integrated circuit. Shrinking time-to-market requirements combined with the increasing complexity of integrated circuits have necessitated changes and improvements in IC design methodology and supporting design automation tools. System level simulation and verification, signal integrity analysis, unifying system level and circuit level design tools are some of the challenges. This workshop will present some of these design challenges and propose some methodology and design automation solutions for the next generation of communications integrated circuits. 2005 RFIC Symposium Plenary Session Sunday, June 12, 5:30 PM LBCC Grand Ballroom 21 ALSO OCCURRI NG SUNDAY SUNDAY WORKSHOPS Organizers: MONDAY MONDAY PANEL SESSION MONDAY TUTORIAL PMA: CMOS PAS STEP ON THE GAAS! Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM TMA: EMI/EMC FUNDAMENTALS FOR RF/MW ENGINEERS Date & Time: Monday, June 13; 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Ctr., Grand Ballroom 1 Location: Organizers: Fazal Ali, Nokia Mike Golio, RF Power Devices Topics & Speakers: Panel: Aditya Gupta, Anadigics Julio Costa, RFMD Pete Zampardi, Skyworks Ali Hajimari, Axiom/Caltech Shankar Krishnamurty, VT Silicon Sponsor: RFIC Symposium Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 ✗ ✗ ✗ ✗ Introduction to EMC, W.H. Cantrell EMC Fundamentals, Part I., A. Mediano EMC Fundamentals, Part II, W.H. Cantrell Basic Design & Diagnosis/Problem Solving Techniques, A. Mediano ✗ RF/MW EMI Problem Solving Strategies, W.H. Cantrell Research and development of RF/microwave power amplifiers based on CMOS technology has been ongoing for the last decade. In the past year, some CMOS based mobile phone product offerings have been demonstrated. Could this represent the beginning of the end for GaAs HBT and Si BJT technologies... or are CMOS PAs ultimately destined for the ash heap? Although the physical limitations of CMOS devices ensure that the incumbent (GaAs HBT and Silicon BJT) technologies will always be preferred for the mobile phone’s power amplifier from a pure performance perspective, can the CMOS PAs offer other compelling advantages? The experts on our panel will discuss the performance (RF, thermal, robustness), process technology, cost, and maturity (levels of integration and packaging) related to CMOS power amplifier design and deployment. The panelists will also debate the specific future of GaAs HBT and CMOS power amplifiers for handset applications. Organizers: W.H. Cantrell, Motorola and the University of Texas at Arlington A. Mediano, The University of Zaragoza Sponsor: MTT-17: HF, VHF, UHF Techniques Many companies are beginning to view Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) as an important part of an engineer’s basic training, as well as a desirable skill-set for obtaining a competitive edge in the marketplace. This tutorial provides a basic introduction to EMC, and covers the four EMC coupling mechanisms: 1. Common impedance coupling (sharing a common impedance for the return currents) 2. Capacitive coupling (electric field coupling in the near-field) 3. Inductive coupling (magnetic field coupling in the near-field, Faraday’s Law) 4. Radiated coupling (electromagnetic propagation in the far-field) Some of the EMC regulatory requirements are discussed, including how to make radiated emissions measurements at an Open Area Test Site (OATS), and how to make conducted emissions measurements using a Line Impedance Stabilization Network (LISN). Other topics include return current flow and the concept of minimum loop area, filtering techniques with ferrites, decoupling and bypassing, grounding strategies, and PCB design techniques to minimize emissions. The performance of shields and their shielding effectiveness is discussed including methods to obtain extremely high levels of isolation between system components, in excess of 150 dB. This includes an analysis of the role of apertures and airholes, seams and gaps in an enclosure, as well as wires (I/O lines) that penetrate the enclosure. Basic design techniques to avoid EMC problems are presented. Practical tools, hints and examples are presented on how to find and solve EMC problems. Finally, a unique problem solving strategy is presented using two examples common to the RF & microwave industry: (1) Identifying the amount of isolation, the shielding requirements, and the I/O filtering needed between stages in a typical transmitter line-up to avoid gain flatness problems, and (2) Elimination of undesired radiated coupling between a co-located transmitter & receiver, both operating on the same carrier frequency. 22 Location: ✗ Practical Issues of Realizing Filter Couplings, I. Hunter, D. Swanson, University of Leeds/TYCO ✗ Designing Filters to Withstand Inimical Ambient Environments, D. Snyder, RS Microwave ✗ Temperature Compensation of Microwave Filters, C. Wang, Orbital Communication ✗ RF Voltage Breakdown: Case Studies and Prevention, H.C. Bell, HF Plus ✗ Peak Power Handling Limited by Microwave Breakdown in Air – Design and Validation, T. Olsson, Powerwave Technologies ✗ Passive Intermodulation – Experimental Investigation, P. Macchiarella, A. Sartorio, Politecnico di Milano/Forem ✗ Passive Intermodulation (PIM) in Dielectric Resonators, C. McLaren, P. Kumar, Mitec Telecom ✗ Microstrip Filter Design, J. Hong, Heriot-Watt University ✗ Practical Design Issues of Low Cost Polymer Waveguide Filters, E. Wheatley, Nera Research ✗ High Power Handling and DR – State of the Art Output Multiplexers, J-J. Herren, ALCATEL Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 Topics & Speakers: ✗ ADC Requirements for DOD Systems, S. Hary, AFRL ✗ Continuous-Time Modulators for RF Applications, J. Jensen, HRL ✗ High Sampling Rate III-V ADCs, B. Skones, Northrop Grumman ✗ Commercializing R&D Data Converters , M.J. Choe, Rockwell Scientific ✗ Military Applications of High-Speed ADCs, L. Pellon, Lockheed Martin ✗ High-Resolution ADC Techniques, B-S. Song, UCSD ✗ Building the World’s Fastest 8-bit ADC - In CMOS, K. Poulton, Agilent ✗ ADC Requirements for Commercial Systems and HighSpeed ADC Products, D. Robertson, Analog Devices ✗ High-Speed SiGe ADCs , M. Wingender, Atmel ✗ Emerging Interface Standards for High-Speed Analog-toDigital Conversion, TBD, National Semiconductor ✗ Attacking the Analog Scaling Problem with Novel Silicon Device Technology, M. Anthony, Kenet Organizers: K.C. Wang, HRL E. Martinez, Purdue University L. Kushner, Kenet Sponsor: MTT-9, Digital Signal Processing M. Yu, COM DEV D. Snyder, RS Microwave Sponsor: MTT-8, Filters and Passive Components Are you twisted into a knot by rotations? Are you entangled in the Battle of the Matrices? Have incessant positive-real polynomials in filter papers made you conclude that, “positively, I’m gone?” Have you been wondering if you should be optimistic about optimization? Have genetic algorithms gotten to your DNA and neural networks to your neurons? Then relax, sit back, learn about the practical side of filters. Given a proper appreciation of theory, how does a practioner apply theory-based design information to produce filters that will survive in the nasty, real world out there? Within this workshop, we hope to provide many practical tips, because with filters, “the devil is in the details.” You have computed the required coupling coefficient. How do you actually achieve the positive and negative values? How can you implement the filter and have a warm, fuzzy feeling about survival and performance of your design with variations in temperature, humidity, during shock, vibration, at high altitude, submerged in jet fuel or other corrosive liquids including salt water? How to you ensure physical reliability while minimizing weight? What margins are required for high power operation at various altitudes, ranging from sea level to open space? How do these power margins relate to bandwidth and frequency? Why and under what conditions will a passive filter generate interference or intermodulation products in your receiver? Given the multiplicity of design approaches available for dielectric resonator filters, what approach should be selected for given situations? Similarly, what choices drive the design of microstrip filters? You won’t emerge from this workshop knowing everything about filters, but you will unequivocally be more useful as a designer because of the information you will acquire during the eight intense hours of our workshop. The presenters selected for this workshop have many years of battle hardening and want to pass this information on to the microwave community. We hope for an interactive and busy session, and encourage your attendance. High-speed analog to digital converters (ADCs) have enabled many new commercial and military digital sensor and communication systems. They play a key role in interfacing the analog nature of sensing with digital information processing. Tremendous efforts have been invested in developing new circuit architectures, sampling techniques, and advanced device technologies to enhance the resolution and bandwidth performance of highspeed ADCs. As a result of these efforts, today’s society benefits from networks of broadband communication systems, wireless personal devices with multi-functional capabilities, industrial sensor systems with direct connectivity to computer networks, advanced medical instrumentation, etc. In the military market, specialized ADCs have enabled digital radar systems, software re-configurable radios and communication systems, precision weapon systems, as well as other data acquisition systems in space-borne, airborne, and ground-based platforms. The requirements for performance, qualification, and lifetime are stringent. High-speed ADCs have been implemented with virtually all available IC technologies, e.g. Si CMOS and BJT, SiGe HBT, and various III-V HBT and HFET. ADCs have been developed with many novel architectures and circuit design techniques, such as flash, pipeline, ripple-through, folding, interpolation, delta-sigma, etc., In this workshop, a group of experts will present and discuss the latest status and challenges of applications, requirements, architectures, designs, IC technologies, and testing of high-speed ADCs. There will be a panel discussion session following the presentations. All attendees are invited to participate in the discussion. WMC: ADVANCES IN RF POWER AMPLIFIERS: MODELING, DESIGN AND LINEARIZATION Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM WMB: FILTER II: PRACTICAL ASPECTS OF MICROWAVE FILTER DESIGN AND REALIZATION Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Organizers: Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203 Topics & Speakers: Hyatt Regency A ✗ Construction and Validation of Black-Box Behavioral Models of RF Amplifiers, J. Wood, Agilent Technologies ✗ Time Domain Characterization of Nonlinearity and Memory in Power Amplifiers, P. Asbeck, University of California, San Diego Topics & Speakers: ✗ Introduction to Practical Aspects of Microwave Filter Design and Realization, M. Yu, COM DEV 23 MONDAY MONDAY WORKSHOPS WMA: APPLICATION AND TECHNOLOGY OF HIGH-SPEED ANALOG TO DIGITAL CONVERTERS Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM MONDAY MONDAY WORKSHOPS ✗ Separation, Identification, and Compensation of PA Memory Effects at the Circuit and Device Level, S. Kenney, Georgia Institute of Technology ✗ Advanced Techniques for PA IMD Control at the Active Device Level, J.C. Pedro, University of Aveiro ✗ Linearization Issues and Some New Challenges in Microwave Amplifiers, M. O’Droma, University of Limerick ✗ Methodology to Validate and Compare RF Device and Circuit Models, D. Schreurs, K.U. Leuven ✗ Advances in GaAs pHEMT Power Amplifier Design and Manufacture, W. Bosch, Filtronic Ltd. ✗ SiGe Power Amplifier Design for Wireless Applications, L. Roselli, University of Perugia ✗ Advances in Active Harmonic Load Pull Systems, M. Mayer, T.U. Wien Organizers: T.J. Brazil, University College Dublin J.C. Pedro, Institute of Telecommunications, University of Aveiro D. Schreurs, K.U. Leuven Sponsors: MTT-1, Computer-Aided Design MTT-11, Microwave Measurements ✗ THz Compact Range Radar for Military Imaging, W. Nixon, US Army National Ground Intelligence Center ✗ Novel Bio-Molecular Architectures for Enhanced THz Sensing, D. Woolard, US ARL ✗ Sources for Space Applications, I. Mehdi, JPL ✗ Remote Sensing Applications, R. Wylde, QMC Instruments Ltd. D. Adamson, NPL D. Woolard, US ARL/ARO R. Dudley, NPL Sponsors: MTT-11, Microwave Measurements MTT-4, Terahertz Technology In recent years there has been a resurgence in interest in the THz region and a significant amount of published work has focused on new sources and detection schemes, leading to a range of new applications. The objective of this workshop will be to present a review of THz devices, measurement systems, applications and measurement issues. The workshop will include presentations from traditional users of the THz region to more recent users from the optics world. Presentations will also focus on the issues of measurement calibration and repeatability, which are becoming important with the commercialization of THz systems. Broadband wireless access will play a dominant role in the development of a mobile information society in the immediate future. Carrier frequencies in the microwave range and modulation schemes producing signals with high crest factors are common to all concepts for the air link. Both in the uplink and in the downlink of a wireless access scheme the power amplifier plays a crucial role: It is responsible for leaving the highly dynamic output signal undistorted while converting the battery power to microwave power at an efficiency as close to 100% as possible. The conflicting demands of linearity, efficiency, cost and performance create enormous technical challenges. This workshop will bring together a variety of perspectives on this challenging theme including device technology, characterization and measurement, circuit/system level modeling and design, architecture and linearization techniques. Part of the presentations will center on the results of a major new European cooperative research network in RF/Microwave power amplifiers (TARGET) involving some 47 organizations and addressing many of these issues. WME: AM NOISE IN MODERN RECEIVERS Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202C Topics & Speakers: ✗ System Noise Modeling of Mixers, S. Maas, Applied Wave Research ✗ Noise, LO and Spurious Effects on Even Harmonic Mixers, K. Itoh, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. ✗ AM Noise in MMIC Block Receivers, S. Mahon, Mimix Broadband ✗ CMOS Direct Conversion Receiver Design for Low Noise, P. Zhang, RF Micro Devices ✗ Direct Conversion: Circuit Tradeoffs for Low Noise Reception, M. Camiade, United Monolithic Semiconductor WMD: TERAHERTZ RADIATION: TECHNOLOGY, APPLICATIONS AND MEASUREMENT METHODS Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Organizers: Hyatt Regency C Topics & Speakers: ✗ Science & Technology Issues for THz Imaging, M. Rosker, DARPA ✗ Terahertz Spectroscopy of Inorganic Materials, B. Miles, Leeds University ✗ Precision Imaging and Spectroscopy at Terahertz Frequencies, E. Gerecht, NIST ✗ THz Technology and Molecular Interactions, F.D. Lucia, Ohio State University ✗ Advanced THz-Frequency Diode-Based Transmitter and Receiver Technology, T. Crowe, Virginia Diode Inc. ✗ Traceability in THz, D. Adamson, R. Dudley, NPL, UK ✗ THz Sources — Future Developments, H. Ito, Tohoku University ✗ Low Loss and Low Dispersion Guiding of THz Pulses, D. Mittleman, Rice University ✗ Pharmaceutical Measurement Demands for Commercial THz Systems, P. Taday, Teraview Ltd. ✗ THz Remote Sensing of Biological Agents, E. Brown, UCSB ✗ Millimeter Wave (THz) Signature Characterization of Bio-Stimulants, R. Abreu, Goodrich Corp. ✗ THz Characterization of DNA and Proteins, T. Globus, University of Virginia Organizers: E. Camargo, iTerra Communications B. Henderson, M/A-COM Sponsors: MTT-22, Signal Generation and Frequency Conversion MTT-16, Microwave Systems MTT-1, Computer Aided Design Communications receivers operating from VHF through Millimeter Wave have been assembled in recent years with a mixture of MMICs and discrete components on PCB or ceramic substrates. The MMICs have usually been amplifiers, either low noise or drivers; and the discrete components have been diode mixers and filters. Increasingly this approach is giving way to higher levels of chip integration due to ever-increasing market demands for lower costs. Higher levels of chip integration exist in heterodyning block down converters, and in direct conversion receivers with zero or near-zero frequency IF. Direct conversion MMICs are already in use in cellular phones and may soon migrate to higher frequencies. A clear understanding of AM noise is critical to meeting the needs of communications receivers, especially as the density of MMICs continues to increase. The focus of this half-day workshop will be on the analysis of image and LO AM noise effects on the down conversion process, either for fundamental or sub-harmonic, and how these types of noise can be calculated and minimized in the development of low cost receiver chips. Phase noise, as it relates to this, will also receive limited coverage. The subject will be approached from the points of view of system design and circuit design. Experts in system de- 24 MONDAY WORKSHOPS Sponsor: Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP) has recently received much attention as a high frequency circuit substrate and package material. The advantages of LCP compared to other organic substrate materials are low moisture absorption, low coefficient of hydroscopic expansion (CHE), excellent barrier properties, and adjustable coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) through thermal treatment process. Passive circuits on LCP substrates have been demonstrated to have low loss and high performance in the microwave and millimeter-wave regime. LCP is a serious substrate candidate for next generation microwave/millimeter-wave multichip-modules (MCM), systems-on-package (SOP) and advanced packaging technology. Furthermore, LCP has recently been used to develop low-cost microwave/millimeter-wave hermetic shield air-cavity packages for electronics, optoelectronics, and MEMS. In this half-day workshop, the participants will obtain an overview of LCP material properties, fabrication processes and design guidelines of multi-layer LCP substrates, fundamental limitations of multi-layer LCP substrates, demonstration of microwave and millimeter-wave circuits and modules using LCP substrates, and hermetic shield air cavity packages using molded-LCP. WMF: PACKAGING AND INTERCONNECTS FOR MICROWAVE PHOTONICS APPLICATIONS Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 Topics & Speakers: ✗ Chip to Chip Gbit/Sec Optoelectronic Interconnects for Microwave Monolithic Integrated Circuits, R. Simons, NASA Glenn Research Center ✗ Packaging and Interconnect Considerations for 40 Gbit/Sec Optoelectronic Components, K. Goverdhanam, Agere Systems ✗ Micromachined Integrated Packages for Optoelectronic Applications, R. Drayton, University of Minnesota ✗ Stacked Thin-film Surface-mount Packaging with High Density and High Resolution for Compact, High Performance 40 Gbps Applications, L. Studebaker, W. Sitch, Centellax; J. Wolf, American Technical Ceramics ✗ The Space Radiation Environment and Its Effect on Semiconductors and Fiber Optic Systems, K.A. LaBel, NASA/GSFC Organizers: K. Goverdhanam, Agere Systems R.N. Simons, NASA Glenn Research Center Sponsor: MTT-3, Microwave Photonics WMH: HIGH FREQUENCY DIGITAL BACKPLANE INTERCONNECT CHARACTERIZATION AND DESIGN Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: ✗ High Speed Digital Design and Measurements Using VNA and Time Domain ✗ Relfectometry, M. Resso, Agilent Technologies Inc. ✗ 10 Gb/s Backplane Design Using Full-wave Electromagnetics, L. Williams, Ansoft ✗ Obtaining Accurate Device-only S-parameter Data Using In-fixture Measurement Techniques, D. Helster, C. Morgan, Tyco Electronics ✗ Smoothline TRL Calibration Technique, Y. Ling, Intel Corp. ✗ Measurement Techniques and Results Using 4 and 8 Port VNA Test Systems, T. Ruttan, Intel Corp., A. Ferrero, University of Torino WMG: LIQUID CRYSTAL POLYMERS FOR MICROWAVE AND MILLIMETER WAVE PACKAGING Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Organizers: T. Ruttan, Intel Corp. K. Wong, Agilent Technologies Inc. Sponsors: MTT-12, Microwave and Millimeter-wave Packaging 65th ARFTG Symposium With microprocessors pushing higher and higher into the GHz range, packaging and interconnects must be taken into consideration along with circuit layout and device characteristics. Backplane designs for computer systems are also migrating to differential bus structures, which imply multi-port design and measurement challenges. In addition, the design needs to be low cost and suitable for high volume manufacturing. These are very challenging requirements. The same design challenges are also applicable to various high frequency digital telecommunication devices and systems. In this half-day workshop, the participants will be exposed the language of high speed digital design, the meaning of signal integrity, frequency domain and time domain measurement techniques, multiport measurement techniques, modeling tools and best design practices. Hyatt Regency B Topics & Speakers: ✗ RF and Millimeter-wave Multi-layer LCP Modules and MEMS Packaging, A-V. Pham, University of California, Davis ✗ Moisture Resistant Air Cavity LCP Plastic Microwave Power Packages, J.W. Roman, RJR Polymers Inc. ✗ Recent Advances in LCP Based 3D RF and Millimeter-wave Front End, S. Pinel, J. Papapolymerou, Georgia Institute of Technology ✗ 15 Years In and Out of Liquid Crystalline Polyester Films, D. Haas, Sanmina-SCI ✗ Microfabrication Techniques for Liquid Crystal Polymer Substrates, B. Farrell, Foster Miller Organizers: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202AB Topics & Speakers: Design of efficient packages and interconnects plays a vital role in the performance of high-speed optoelectronic components. In this workshop, various topics that address these challenges for a range of optoelectronic components from 2.5 GBits/sec to 40 Gbits/sec will be presented. Emphasis will be placed on electromagnetic field theoretical aspects behind the package and interconnect design as well as on developing manufacturable packaging solutions. Integrated optoelectronic packaging techniques using micromachining will be presented. Novel optoelectronic interconnect schemes for intra/inter chip signal transfer will be discussed. In addition, packaging considerations from a radiation tolerance perspective, space radiation effects on semiconductor and optical systems and ways to mitigate bit error rate degradation due to radiation will be presented. Location: MTT-12, Microwave and Millimeter-wave Packaging A-V. Pham, University of California, Davis G. Ponchak, NASA Glenn Research Center J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology 25 MONDAY sign will focus on the mixing process as a behavioral model that combines characterization data from individual components to estimate overall performance. And experts in circuit design will focus on minimizing noise contributions of the individual components. There will be overlap from both sides to maximize clarity and accuracy of this, often confusing subject. MONDAY WORKSHOPS WMI: NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN LOW-NOISE FREQUENCY SOURCES Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Location: Sponsor: Cost is usually the most important parameter determining the success or failure of a packaging solution. In fact, it is usually a balancing act between cost and performance that must be successfully equalized. However, many designers do not have a full grasp of the cost drivers that affect possible solutions. In addition, new technologies are emerging and old technologies are being applied in new ways. Increased awareness of cost impacts will increase the effectiveness of any engineer tasked with developing or managing microwave, millimeter-wave or high-speed packaging. This session will review major packaging process technologies available for electronics and the issues that affect cost for those technologies. These are HTCC, LTCC, thick film, thin film, laminates, metal housings with glass seals, HDI, LCP and emerging technologies. Each of these will be explained with a goal of achieving understanding of cost drivers and how to apply the technology to real packaging problems. Also, examples of applications requiring low cost packaging will be presented. Users will present how they have applied the available processes to yield cost effective packaging solutions. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202C MONDAY Topics & Speakers: ✗ LTV Analysis, Cyclostationary Noise and Low-Noise Oscillator Design, A. Hajimiri, California Institute of Technology ✗ Recent Advances in Signal Generation Techniques above 10GHz, W. Heinrich, FBH ✗ Optical Techniques for Low-Noise Microwave Frequency Sources, L. Maleki, Jet Propulsion Lab ✗ Low-Noise CMOS Direct Digital Synthesizers, T. Harris, Analog Devices ✗ Recent Developments in PLL Technologies, R. Reedy, Peregrine Semiconductor Organizers: G. Lyons, MIT Lincoln Lab P. Khanna, Celeritek Sponsors: MTT-16, Microwave Systems MTT-22, Signal Generation & Frequency Conversion WMK: TECHNOLOGY AND IMPLEMENTATION OF HIGH SPEED/GHZ DIGITAL INTERCONNECTIONS Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM The past few years have seen several significant new developments in the creation and understanding of low-noise frequency sources. The purpose of this workshop is to review these new developments and extrapolate trends within these new development areas. An effort will be made to evaluate the impact of these new developments on future microwave systems and applications. The workshop will have a tutorial flavor and the focus will be on providing a thorough understanding of each of the new developments within the broad context of the signal generation field. New understanding comes from the application of linear time varying (LTV) theory to the analysis of low-noise sources. Progress continues to be made in generating low-noise signals at high frequency (X-band), while new optical techniques challenge traditional low-phase-noise microwave sources. Direct digital synthesis (DDS) is now among the standard lownoise techniques with the advent of advanced CMOS DDS chips. Finally, sigma-delta fractional-N PLL techniques, Ku-band CMOS prescalars, and integrated VCO/PLLs have given additional flexibility to low-noise sources. Location: ✗ Overview of Gigabit Backplane Technologies: Optical vs Electrical, M. Mandich, Bell Labs ✗ Research in Multi-Gigabit Chip-to-Chip Connections, R. Mooney, Intel Corp. ✗ CDMA and FDMA Based Interconnects for Future Inter-ULSI Communications, F. Chang, University of California, Los Angeles ✗ Novel Compliant Interconnects for 10 GHz and Above, E. Bogatin, Interconnect Devices ✗ CMOS Equalizer for Multi Gigabit FR-4 Backplane Channels, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology Organizers: H. Boss, Rohde & Schwarz Y-K Chen, Bell Labs C. Pobanz, Inphi Corp. Sponsor: MTT-9, Digital Signal Processing Some years ago “high speed interconnections” were single 50 Ω transmission lines between microwave transistors or amplifiers. This has changed as applications have progressed rapidly from the MHz to the GHz range (wireless systems, backplane communications, microprocessors…) and gigabit-rate digital signals are now routinely traversing low-cost PC boards and IC packages. Proper design and implementation of these systems requires expertise beyond digital design, into the realm of RF and microwave engineering. This workshop will give a state of the art overview of technology and implementation of high speed interconnections. We will show the possibilities of high speed signaling with electrical and optical interconnections, present novel GHz interconnect-systems and the implementation of interconnection systems for such high speeds. The speakers are well recognized experts from research, industry and academia. There will be a panel discussion session following the presentations. All attendees are invited to participate in the discussion. Hyatt Regency B Topics & Speakers: ✗ HTCC & LTCC Packaging Methods for Cost Sensitive Products, B. Minehan, AdTech Ceramics ✗ Achieving Low Cost Thick Film Microwave Circuits, C. Kucenas, Microplex Inc. ✗ Cost Drivers in Thin Film Circuits, B. St. Pierre, Ultra Source ✗ Laminate Technology Packaging, J. Dobrick, Rogers Corp. ✗ HDI, LCP and Emerging Packaging Technologies, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Techology ✗ Low Cost MEM Packaging, D. Hyman, Xcom Wireless ✗ Low Cost High Power Packaging, R. Sturdivant, Microwave Packaging Technology Inc. Organizers: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202AB Topics & Speakers: WMJ: LOW COST PACKAGING FOR MICROWAVE AND MILLIMETER WAVE PRODUCTS Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Location: MTT-12, Microwave and Millimeter-wave Packaging R. Sturdivant, Microwave Packaging Technology Inc. W. Heinrich, Ferdinand-Braun Institute A. Lindner, Remec Inc. 26 Twenty student paper finalists were selected. The finalists will be given complimentary registration for IMS2005, complimentary tickets to the MTT-S Awards Banquet, and some travel subsidies sponsored by the IEEE and the National Science Foundation. The student finalists will present their papers at their appropriate regular sessions, and also make special presentations at the Interactive Forum on Tuesday, June 14, from 1:30 to 4:30 PM. All symposium participants are welcome and encouraged to visit the student papers during the Interactive Forum, at which time they will also be evaluated by a group of judges. Six top papers and four honorable mentions will be selected to receive cash awards, certificates, and gifts. These will be announced and presented during the Student Awards Luncheon on Thursday, June 16. We are very pleased to announce the finalists for the IMS2005 Student Paper Competition: A 60 GHz MMIC Dual-Quadrature Mixer in pHEMT Technology for Ultra Wideband IF Signals and High LO to RF Isolation S. Gunnarsson, Microwave Electronics Laboratory, Goteborg, Sweden New Triangular Microstrip Loop Resonators for Bandpass Dual-mode Filter Applications R. Wu, Royal Military College of Canada, Kingston, Canada Linearity Enhancement of a Directly Modulated Uncooled DFB Laser in a Multi-channel Wireless-over-fibre Systems T. Ismail, University College London, London, UK Analysis of the Frequency Response of SAW Filters Using Finite-difference Time-domain Method K. Wong, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China Tunable Planar Combline Filter with Multiple Source/Load Coupling M. Sanchez-Renedo, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Madrid, Spain A 5.8 GHz SiGe HBT Direct-conversion I/Q-Channel Sub-harmonic Mixer for Low Power and Simplified Receiver Architecture B.G. Choi, Information and Communications University, Daejeon, Republic of Korea Propagation of Resonance Cones in Truncated Hyperbolic Transmission-Line Grids Over Ground O. F. Siddiqui, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada A Retrodirective Array with Interference Rejection Capability D. S. Goshi, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, USA A 2.7 kW, 29 MHz Class-E/Fodd Amplifier with a Distributed Active Transformer S. Jeon, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, USA Design of Push-push Oscillators for Reducing 1/f Noise Upconversion J. Choi, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA A Predistortion Linearization System for High Power Amplifiers with Low Frequency Envelope Memory Effects W. Woo, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA Tissue Sensing Adaptive Radar for Breast Cancer Detection: Preliminary Experimental Results J.M. Sill, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada Integrated THz Receivers Based on NbN HEB Mixers and InP MMIC IF Amplifiers F. Rodriguez-Morales, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA Design of Ring Resonator Mode Spacing and Bandwidth Using the Phase Response of Composite Right/Left Handed Transmission Lines C.A. Allen, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, USA Reconfigurable MEMS Transmission Lines with Independent ZO- and beta-Tuning B. Lakshminaryanan, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA Transient Electromagnetic Modeling Using Recurrent Neural Networks H. Sharma, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada A Novel MEMS Impedance Tuner Simultaneously Optimized for Maximum Impedance Range and Power Handling Y. Lu, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA Embedded Dielectric Resonator Filter in Layered Polymer Packaging W. She, Purdue University, West Lafayette, USA Location Tracking with Directional Antennas in Wireless Sensor Networks C. Yang, Purdue University, West Lafayette, USA Experimental Evaluation of an Active Envelope Load Pull Architecture for High Speed Device Characterization T. Williams, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK Scott Wedge Jim Rosenberg Co-Chairs, Student Paper Competition STUDENT HIGH EFFICIENCY POWER AMPLIFIER DESIGN COMPETITION MTT-5 (High Power Microwave Components Committee) will hold a new competition at IMS2005. The contest will take place in the Interactive Forum (IF) area, and will have a display during IF session hours. The contest is open to all students and graduate students registered at an educational establishment. The competitors are required to design, construct, and measure a high efficiency power amplifier, at a frequency of their choice above 1 GHz but less than 20 GHz, and having an output power level of at least 5 watts, but less than 100 watts into a 50 ohm load. The winner will be judged on the design, which demonstrates the highest power added efficiency (PAE). The power amplifiers will be tested to verify their performance during the Interactive Forum at IMS2005. The winner will receive a prize of $1000 and will be invited to submit a paper describing the design for the MTT Microwaves Magazine. Contestants must notify the MTT-5 committee by e-mailing to Kiki Ikossi at ikossi@ieee.org of their intention to compete in the contest before April 1, 2005. Questions can also be sent to this address. 27 TUESDAY MTT-S STUDENT PAPER COMPETITION A longstanding tradition of the International Microwave Symposium is the Student Paper Competition. Each year, the papers that represent the research accomplishments of individual students undergo an arduous review process to identify and acknowledge the best and brightest students in our microwave community. The high standards of reviewers and judges ensure that the best papers of the Student Paper Competition also rank among the best papers of the Symposium. This year we received 304 submissions for the Student Paper Competition. Approximately 50% of these papers were accepted for presentation, and then given additional detailed scrutiny by the subcommittees of the TPC to select a group of finalists. A step in this process included ranking student paper nominations relative to all other accepted papers. Although no surprise, many of the student paper finalists were ranked by their reviewing subcommittee as the best paper they reviewed. IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS TU1C Frequency Domain Numerical Techniques Chair: D. Yang Co-chair: L. Perregrini LBCC 202C 8:00–9:40 AM TU1B Frequency Conversion and Control Circuits Chair: L. Reynolds Co-chair: F. Schindler LBCC 202AB TU1D Silicon- and GaAs-based Novel Amplifiers and Mixers Chair: T. Tokumitsu Co-chair: D.E. Meharry LBCC 203 TU1A-1: Bi-directional 60 GHz Radio-onfiber Systems Using Cascaded SOA-EAM Frequency Up/Down Converters. J. Seo, C. Choi, W. Choi, Yonsei University; Y. Kang, Y. Jung, J. Kim, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute TU1B-1: A Subharmonic CMOS Mixer Based on Threshold Voltage Modulation B.G. Perumana, C. Lee, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology; S. Chakraborty, Texas Instruments TU1C-1: Rapid 3D Electromagnetic Simulation of Quasi-periodic Structures S.J. Cooke, B. Levush, Naval Research Lab TU1D-1: Intermodulation Reduction Concept for Cascode RF Amlifiers Z.M. Nosal, Warsaw University of Technology TU1A-2: Linearity Enhancement of a Directly Modulated Uncooled DFB Laser in a Multi-channel Wireless-over-fibre Systems T. Ismail, J.E. Mitchell, A.J. Seeds, University College London TU1B-2: A 6-30 GHz Image-rejection Distributed Resistive MMIC Mixer in a Low Cost Surface Mount Package K. Fujii, H. Morkner, Agilent Technologies Inc. TU1C-2: A Surface Integral Equation Formulation for Dielectric Post Structures in Waveguides F. Arndt, V. Catina, University of Bremen; J. Brandt, MiG Microwave Innovation Group TU1D-2: Attenuation Compensation Techniques in Distributed SiGe HBT Amplifiers Using Highly Lossy Thin Film Microstrip Lines C. Schick, T. Feger, E. Soenmez, K.B. Schad, A. Trasser, H. Schumacher, University of Ulm TU1A-3: Radio-on-fiber Downlink Transmission Systems Based on Optically Controlled InP/InGaAs HPT Oscillators C. Choi, J. Seo, W. Choi, Yonsei University; H. Kamitsuna, M. Ida, K. Kurishima, NTT Corp. TU1B-3: An Ultra Compact and Broadband 15-75 GHz BPSK Modulator Using 0.13 µm CMOS Process H. Chang, P. Wu, T. Huang, H. Wang, National Taiwan University; Y. Tsai, C. Chen, TSMC TU1C-3: Efficient CAD of Optimal Multi-port Junctions Loaded with Partial-height Cylindrical Posts Using the 3D BI-RME Method A.A. San-Blas, Univ. Miguel Hernandez de Elche; F. Mira, V.E. Boria, Univ. de Valencia; B. Gimeno, M. Bressan, G. Conciauro, P. Arcioni, Univ. degli Studi di Pavia TU1D-3: Micro-power Amplifiers for Wireless PAN Applications B.G. Perumana, C. Lee, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology; S. Chakraborty, Texas Instruments TU1C-4: On the Rigorous Calculation of All Ohmic Losses in Rectangular Waveguide Multi-Port Junctions M. Taroncher, S. Cogollos, V.E. Boria, A. Vidal, J. Hueso, Univ. Politecnica de Valencia; B. Gimeno, Universidad de Valencia; I. Hidalgo, Alcatel Espacio TU1D-4: Highly-integrated Low-power WCDMA SiGe Transceiver for Mobile Terminals H. Shih, T. Fu, Y. Chen, J. Liu, P. Su, K. Juang, T. Yang, Industrial Technology Research Institute TU1A-4: A Predistortion Type Equi-path Linearizer Designed for Radio-on-fiber System S. Tanaka, N. Taguchi, Y. Atsumi, Optowave Lab Inc.; T. Kimura, Yazaki Corp 9:20 AM 9:30 AM TU1B-4: Low-voltage and Broadband V-band InP HEMT Frequency Doubler MMIC K. Nishikawa, T. Enoki, S. Sugitani, T. Kosugi, M. Tokumitsu, I. Toyoda, K. Tsunekawa, NTT Corp. TU1A-5: Simultaneous All-optical Frequency Upconversion for WDM Radio over Fiber Applications H.J. Song, J.S. Lee, J.I. Song, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST) TU1B-5: Low Power 71 GHz Static Frequency Divider in SiGe:C HBT Technology L. Wang, G. Wang, J. Borngraeber, IHP GmbH; A. Thiede, University of Paderborn 9:10 AM 9:00 AM 8:50 AM 8:40 AM 8:30 AM 8:20 AM 8:10 AM 8:00 AM TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005 TU1A Radio Over Fiber: Devices, Techniques and Systems Chair: E. Rezek Co-chair: D. Novak LBCC 201B TU1A-6: Relative-intensity-noise Reduction Technique for Frequency-converted Radioon-fiber System N. Taguchi, S. Tanaka, Y. Atsumi, Optowave Lab Inc.; T. Kimura, Yazaki Corp. TU1B-6: A Millimeter-wave Wideband SPDT Switch with Traveling-wave Concept Using 0.13 µm CMOS Process M. Yeh, Z. Tsai, K. Lin, H. Wang, National Taiwan University; C. Sut, C. Chao, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. TU1D-5: One Single Traveling-wave MMIC for Highly Linear Broadband Mixers and Variable Gain Amplifiers I. Kallfass, H. Schumacher, T. Purtova, University of Ulm; A. Brokmeier, W. Ludwig, TU1C-5: On the Definition and the Derivation of the Characteristic Parameters of Coupled Lines and Application to MoM Analysis M. Farina, A. Morini, T. Rozzi, Univ. Politecnica delle Marche TU1A-7: Photonic Vector Modulation Tx/Rx Architecture for Generation, Remote Delivery and Detection of M-QAM Signals M.A. Piqueras, B. Vidal, J. L. Corral, V. Polo, H. Pfrommer, A. Martinez, J. Marti, Polytechnic University of Valencia TU1D-6: First Demonstration of Low Power Monolithic Transimpedance Amplifier Using InP/GaAsSb/InP DHBTs X. Zhu, J. Wang, D. Pavlidis, University of Michigan; S. Hsu, National Tsinghua University 28 TU1E Filter Theory and Synthesis Techniques Chair: M. Yu Co-chair: S. Kanamaluru LBCC 204 8:00 AM TU1E-1: Cascaded Singlets Realized by Node Insertions H.C. Bell, HF Plus 2005 IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium TUESDAY TU1E-2: Direct-coupled Realizations for Microwave Bandstop Filters R. J. Cameron, COMDEV Europe Ltd.; Y. Wang, M. Yu, COMDEV Ltd. TU1E-3: A Design Technique for Symmetric Dualband Filters G. Macchiarella, Politecnico di Milano; S. Tamiazzo, Andrew, Agrate TU1E-4: Coupling Matrix Synthesis for a New Class of Microwave Filter Configuration F. Seyfert, INRIA; R.J. Cameron, COMDEV; J.C. Faugere, Univ. Paris VI 9:10 AM 9:00 AM 8:50 AM 8:40 AM 8:30 AM 8:20 AM 8:10 AM Plenary Session Tuesday, June 14, 10:10 AM LBCC Grand Ballroom ALSO OCCURRI NG 9:30 AM 9:20 AM TU1E-5: Inhomogeneous Stepped-impedance Corrugated Waveguide Low-pass Filters. R. Levy, R. Levy Assoc. 29 TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS TU3B Hot Carrier Effects and Mixer Technology Chair: H.C. Huang Co-chair: Z. Bardai LBCC 202AB TU3C Advances in time domain modeling Chair: L. Roselli Co-chair: M. Celuch LBCC 202C TU3A-1: Location Tracking with Directional Antennas in Wireless Sensor Networks C. Yang, S. Bagchi, W.J. Chappell, Purdue University TU3B-1: Distortion Free Varactor Diode Topologies for RF Adaptivity K. Buisman, L.C. de Vreede, M. Spirito, A. Akhnoukh, T.L. Scholtes, L.K. Nanver, Delft University of Technology; L.E. Larson, University of California at San Diego UCSD TU3C-1: Transfer Function Representation of Passive Electromagnetic Structures Y. Kuznetsov, A. Baev, T. Shevgunov, Moscow Aviation Institute (State University of Technology, Moscow, Russia); M. Zedler, P. Russer, TU Muenchen TU3A-2: Environmental Effects on RFID Tag Antennas D.M. Dobkin, Enigmatics; S.M. Weigand, WJ Communications Inc. TU3B-2: Impact of Hot Carrier Stress on RF Power Characteristics of MOSFETs S. Huang, D. Yang, C. Chang, National Chiao Tung University; K. Chen, G. Huang, National Nano Device Labs; V. Liang, H. Tseng, United Microelectronics Corp. TU3C-2: State Space System Representation of Time Domain Responses from Electromagnetic Simulations K. Naishadham, J.E. Piou, MIT Lincoln Lab 1:20–3:00 PM TU3D FBAR Filters for Cellular Phone Applications Focused Session Chair: R. Weigel Co-chair: C. Ruppel LBCC 203 TU3D-1: Invited: High-Q Resonators Using FBAR/SAW Technology and Their Applications M. Ueda, T. Nishihara, J. Tsutsumi, S. Taniguchi, T. Yokoyama, S. Inoue, Y. Satoh, Fujitsu Labs; T. Miyashita, Fujitsu Media Devices TU3B-3: Hot Carrier Effect on Power Performance in GaAs PHEMT MMIC Power Amplifiers Y. Chou, R. Grundbacher, R. Lai, B. Allen, B. Osgood, A. Sharma, Q. Kan, D. Leung, D. Eng, P. Chin, T. Block, A. Oki, Northrop Grumman Space Technology TU3A-3: RF Barcodes Using Multiple Frequency Bands I. Jalaly, University of Surrey; I.D. Robertson, University of Leeds TU3B-4: Isolation Issues in multifunctional Si/SiGe ICs at 24 GHz E. Sonmez, S. Chartier, A. Trasser, H. Schumacher, University of Ulm 2:50 PM 2:40 PM 2:30 PM 2:20 PM 2:10 PM 2:00 PM 1:50 PM 1:40 PM 1:30 PM 1:20 PM TU3A Sensors and Sensor Systems Chair: I. Gresham Co-chair: G. Hopkins LBCC 201B TU3D-2: Invited: Ultra-miniature Monolithic FBAR Filters for Wireless Applications D. Shim, Y. Park, K. Nam, S. Yun, D. Kim, B. Ha, I. Song, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology TU3C-3: Domain Decomposition FDTD Algorithm Combining with Numerical TL Calibration Technique for Parameter Extraction of Substrate Integrated Circuits F. Xu, K. Wu, Ecole Polytechnique TU3D-3: Invited: The Effect of Perimeter Geometry on FBAR Electrical Performance R. Ruby, J. Larson, Agilent Technologies TU3C-4: Low Reflection Macromodels for a Stable FDTD Scheme Operating with Highly Refined Local Meshes P. Sypek, L. Kulas, M. Mrozowski, Gdansk Univ. of Technology TU3D-4: Invited: A Tunable Bandpass BAW Filter Architecture and Its Application to WCDMA Filter J.F. Carpentier, C. Tilhac, G. Caruyer, P. Ancey, STMicroelectronics; F. Dumont, STMicroelectronics, G. Parat, CEA-LETI TU3A-4: A Conformal 10 GHz Rectenna for Wireless Powering of Piezoelectric Sensor Electronics C. Walsh, S. Rondineau, M. Jankovic, Z. Popovic, University of Colorado; G. Zhao, Intelligent Automation Inc. TU3A-5: A Novel Small Tapered Slot Antenna for Passive Imaging Sensors M. Sato, T. Hirose, Fujitsu Labs Ltd. TU3D-5: Invited: Energy Loss Mechanisms in SMR-type BAW Devices R. Thalhammer, R. Aigner, Infineon Technologies TU3B-5: A Fully Integrated 5.2 GHz SiGe HBT Upconversion Micromixer Using Lumped Balun and LC Current Combiner T. Wu, C. Meng, T. Wu, National Chiao Tung University; G. Huang, National Nano Device Labs TU3C-5: A Novel Wave Separation Scheme for the Extraction of S-parameters in NonTEM Waveguides for the FVTD Method D. Baumann, C. Fumeaux, R. Vahldieck, ETH Zurich TU3A-6: Cement Kiln Temperature Measurements Using Microwave Radiometry K.D. Stephan, E. Ryza, Texas State UniversitySan Marcos; J.A. Pearce, L. Wang, University of Texas at Austin TU3D-6: Invited: Comparison of Modeconversion, Energy-trapping and Lateral Acoustic Coupling in FBAR and SBAR R.F. Milsom, H-P. Löbl, F. Vanhelmont, A.B.M. Jansman, J-W. Lobeek, A. Tuinhout, Philips Research Labs TU3D-7: Invited: Design Flow and Methodology on the Design of BAW Components E. Schmidhammer, B. Bader, W. Sauer, M. Schmiedgen, H. Heinze, C. Eggs, T. Metzger, EPCOS TU3B-6: A 5.8 GHz SiGe HBT Directconversion I/Q-channel Sub-harmonic Mixer for Low Power and Simplified Receiver Architecture B.G. Choi, C.S. Park, Information and Communications University 30 TU3C-6: A Multigrid-enhanced Iterative ADI Method S. Wang, Kelly Scientific Inc.; J. Chen, University of Houston TU3D-8: Invited: Simulation of Transverse Effects in FBAR Devices A. Reinhardt, V. Laude, S. Ballandras, FEMTO-ST Institute, Universite de Franche Comte NOTES TUESDAY See page 45 for Tuesday Panel Sessions 31 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS 3:30–5:10 PM TU4B MW Component Miniaturization, Performance Optimization, Size Reduction & Emerging Tech. Chair: C.P. Wen Co-chair: D. Hornbuckle LBCC 202AB TU4C New Applications of Time Domain Methods Chair: M.M. Tentzeris Co-chair: W.J.R. Hoefer LBCC 202C TU4D Microwave Magnetic Devices Chair: D. Adam Co-chair: B. El-sharawy LBCC 203 TU4A-1: Symmetrical Realization for Predistorted Microwave Filters M. Yu, R.J. Cameron, D.J. Smith, V. Dokas, Y. Wang, COM DEV Ltd. TU4B-1: CMOS Antenna Tuning Unit for 2.4 GHz ISM Band P. Sjblom, H. Sjland, Lund University TU4C-1: Analysis of the Frequency Response of SAW Filters Using Finite-difference Timedomain Method K. Wong, W. Tam, Hong Kong Polytechnic University TU4D-1: Stress Related Insertion Loss in Longitudinal Field Ferrite Devices C.R. Boyd, Jr., Microwave Applications Group TU4A-2: LTCC Wide-band Canonical Ridge Waveguide Filters M.M. Fahmi, K.A. Zaki, University of Maryland; J.A. Ruiz-Cruz, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; A.J. Piloto, Kyocera America TU4B-2: 800 MHz-2.5 GHz Miniaturized Multilayer Symmetrical Stacked Baluns for Silicon Based RF ICs K. Ma, J. Ma, L. Jia, B. Ong, K. Yeo, M. Do, Nanyang Technological University TU4C-2: Topology and Design of Wideband 3D Metamaterials Made of Periodically Loaded Transmission Line Arrays W.J. Hoefer, P.P. So, University of Victoria; D. Thompson, M.M. Tentzeris, Georgia Inst. of Technology TU4D-2: Left-handed Rectangular Waveguides Periodically Filled with Ferrite T. Ueda, Kyoto Institute of Technology; M. Tsutsumi, Fukui University of Technology 3:50 PM 3:40 PM 3:30 PM TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005 TU4A Filter Design and Implementation Chair: H-W. Yao Co-chair: J. Modelski LBCC 201B TU4D-3: Low Loss Two-port Lumped Element Isolator Using Improved Gyrator Circuit T. Hasegawa, T. Makino, S. Hino, K. Ohira, T. Okada, Murata Manufacturing, Co. Ltd. 4:00 PM TU4A-3: Parallel Coupled Line Notch Filter with Wide Spurious-Free Passbands R.V. Snyder, S. Shin, RS Microwave TU4B-3: Very High Density RF MIM Capacitor Compatible with VLSI K. Chiang, C. Lai, H. Kao, National ChiaoTung Univ., SNDL, Dept of Elec & Comp. Eng.; A. Chin, Inst of Microelectronics; S. McAlister, Nat’l Research Council TU4A-5: Embedded Dielectric Resonator Filter in Layered Polymer Packaging W. She, E.E. Hoppenjans, W.J. Chappell, Purdue University TU4B-4: Impact of Design on High Frequency Performances of Advanced MIM Capacitors Using SiN Dielectric Layers J. Piquet, C. Bermond, T. Lacrevaz, B. Blampey, B. Flechet, G. Angenieux, LAHC; M. Thomas, A. Farcy, J. Torres, STMicroelec. TU4A-6: Discrete Tunable Dielectric Resonator for Microwave Applications G. Panaitov, R. Ott, N. Klein, Forschungszentrum Juelich TU4B-5: Low Noise and High Gain RF MOSFETs on Plastic Substrates H. Kao, B. Hung, K. Chiang, Z. Lai, Nat’l Chiao-Tung Univ.; G. Samudra, Nat’l Univ. of Singapore; A. Chin, Inst. of Microelectronics; S. McAlister, Nat’l Res. Council of Canada 5:00 PM TU4C-3: Efficient Finite-difference Timedomain (FDTD) Modeling of Periodic Leakywave Structures T. Kokkinos, C.D. Sarris, G.V. Eleftheriades, University of Toronto TU4D-4: Design Optimization of Lumped Element Circulator Based on Inductance Eigenvalue Evaluation T. Miura, University of Manchester TU4C-4: Transient Modeling of Gyromagnetic Materials with the TLM Intercell Network Concept H. Du, P.P. So, W.J. Hoefer, University of Victoria TU4A-7: Rectangular Waveguide Elliptic Filters with Capacitive and Inductive Irises and Integrated Coaxial Excitation J.A. Ruiz-Cruz, J.R. Montejo-Garai, J.M. Rebollar, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; K.A. Zaki, University of Maryland TU4A-8: Novel Waveguide Filters with Multiple Attenuation Poles Using Frequency Selective Surfaces M. Ohira, H. Deguchi, M. Tsuji, H. Shigesawa, Doshisha University TU4D-5: Duplexing Ferrite Reciprocal Phase Shifters C.R. Boyd, Jr., Microwave Applications Group TU4D-6: Ferromagnetic RF Integrated Inductor with Closed Magnetic Circuit Structure M. Yamaguchi, S. Bae, K. Kim, Tohoku University; K. Tan, T. Kusumi, K. Yamakawa, Akita Research Institute of Advanced Technology TU4B-6: A K-band AlGaN/GaN HFET MMIC Amplifier on Sapphire Using Novel Superlattice Cap Layer M. Nishijima, T. Murata, Y. Hirose, M. Hikita, N. Negoro, H. Sakai, Y. Uemoto, K. Inoue, T. Tanaka, D. Ueda, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. 4:50 PM 4:40 PM 4:30 PM 4:20 PM 4:10 PM TU4A-4: A 26 GHz Band Dielectric Waveguide Diplexer with Flange Interfaces K. Sano, K. Ito, TOKO Inc. TU4C-5: Efficient Modeling of PIN Diode Switches Employing Time-domain Electromagnetic-physics-based Simulators Y.A. Hussein, Stanford University; S.M. ElGhazaly, University of Tennessee, Knoxville; S.M. Goodnick, Arizona State University TU4B-7: A Poly-Si Gate Carbon Nanotube Field Effect Transistor for High Frequency Applications S. Kim, L. Rabieirad, J. Jeon, S. Mohammadi, Purdue University; T. Choi, University of Michigan; M. Shim, University of Illinois TU4D-7: Tunable and Simple Microwave Detector Using MSW Oscillator K. Horikawa, T. Kodera, Osaka Institute of Technology 32 TU4E Distributed RF Sensor Communication Systems Focused Session Chair: B. Spielman Co-chair: T. Kemerley LBCC 204 TUESDAY TU4E-2: Invited: The Intel Mote Platform: Bluetooth-based Sensor Networks and Applications R.M. Kling, Intel Corp. 4:00 PM 3:50 PM 3:40 PM 3:30 PM TU4E-1: Invited: A Vision for Wireless Sensor Networks M. Horton, Crossbow Technology Inc. TU4E-4: Invited: Networked Infomechanical Systems (NIMS): Next Generation Sensor Networks for Environmental Monitoring W.J. Kaiser, Electrical Engineering Dept., Center for Embedded Networked Sensing, UCLA TU4E-5: Invited: Fine Grained Composition of Distributed Sensor System Infrastructure V. Subramonian, C. Gill, Washington Univeristy in St. Louis 5:00 PM 4:50 PM 4:40 PM 4:30 PM 4:20 PM 4:10 PM TU4E-3: Invited: Defense Applications for Large Numbers of Distributed Small Sensors R. Parker, B. Schott, USC/ISI-East 33 TUESDAY FOCUSED SESSIONS TU3D: FBAR FILTERS FOR CELLULAR PHONE APPLICATIONS Date & Time: Tuesday, June 14, 1:20–3:00 PM TU4E: DISTRIBUTED RF SENSOR/COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS Date & Time: Tuesday, June 14, 3:30–5:10 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203 Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 Chair: Robert Weigel, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany Chair: Barry E. Spielman, Washington University in St. Louis Co-Chair: Tim Kemerley, Wright Patterson AFB Co-Chair: Clemens Ruppel, EPCOS AG, Munich, Germany Sponsors: MTT-16, Microwave Systems MTT-6, Microwave & MM-wave IC MTT-12, Microwave & MM-wave Packaging BAW/FBAR technology has recently emerged as a preferred technology for the realization of miniaturized high performance RF filters and duplexers for wireless applications like cellular phones for US PCS application. In US PCS CDMA systems due to the small frequency separation of only 20 MHz between transmit and receive bands, duplexer filters with steep skirts, a narrow roll-off band and strong nearby selectivity are required. In addition, the duplexer filters are expected to satisfy the more general requirements of low insertion attenuation of typically 3 to 3.5 dB, and a high power durability for the TX duplexer filter. These requirements may be met by bulk acoustic wave (BAW) and/or film bulk acoustic wave resonator (FBAR) filters. Design, fabrication, and application of BAW/FBAR filters will be highlighted in this session. This focused session will deal with emerging technologies and applications involving a large number of distributed, extremely small sensors that independently collect information, possibly interpret that information, and communicate a response to the other sensors as an ad hoc network and/or a central location to effect a collective objective. These technologies have potential for impacting: defense applications, medical applications, agricultural management, structure and earthquake monitoring, industrial controls, machinery condition monitoring, transportation and shipping, power grid monitoring and management, fire fighting and rescue operations, home automation, and interactive toys. The presenters will be asked to address when possible, issues relating to chip and sensor integration and packaging, software/middleware (including self-organizing and self-repairing networking protocols and security issues), and operating systems. The session will focus on applications involving MOTES, MEMS, and RF sensors. TU3E: MEMORIAL SESSION FOR DON PARKER Date & Time: Tuesday, June 14, 1:20–3:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 Chair: Robert L. Eisenhart, Eisenhart & Assoc. Organizer: Robert L. Eisenhart, Eisenhart & Assoc. Sponsor: IMS2005 Steering Committee This session is an opportunity to show our deep respect and admiration for Don Parker who recently passed away. Although Don is credited with innumerable contributions to the MTT-S, he is best remembered for his soft-spoken ways of accomplishing things and getting others involved. Several of Don’s friends and associates will say a few words in remembrance. Please let me know (contact R.L.Eisenhart@ieee.org) if you would like to participate in the session. You may speak or provide a letter that can be read for you. Particularly interesting would be unique circumstances you shared with Don. 34 WEDNESDAY FOCUSED SESSIONS WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SESSIONS Date & Time: WE2C: TERAHERTZ IMAGING Wednesday, June 15, 10:10–11:50 AM Date & Time: Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 103AB Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 201B Chair: Peter H. Siegel, Caltech/JPL Chair: Co-Chair: Koji Mizuno, Tohoku University David McQuiddy, Jr., TriQuint Semiconductor Inc. Sponsor: MTT-4, Terahertz Techniques Co-Chair: John Horton, J.B. Horton Group Organizers: John Horton, Vansant Prabhu, Ayre Rosen Sponsor: IMS 2005 Steering Committee This special focused session highlights both traditional and novel applications of THz Imaging, from space science to agriculture to biology and medicine. Five distinguished invited speakers will summarize their work in this very interesting and rapidly expanding field. WE2D: A TRIBUTE TO HAROLD SOBOL Wednesday, June 15, 10:10–11:50 AM IMS2005 will honor Harold Sobol for his many contributions to the microwave industry and to IEEE, especially to the Microwave Theory and Techniques, and the Communications societies. This session will include an overview of Hal’s career, given in presentations by his co-workers. Members of his family are expected to attend this session. If you wish to make a presentation at the session, please contact John Horton via e-mail at j.horton@ieee.org, Vansant Prabhu at prabhu@uta.edu, Jitenda Goel at jitenda_goel@raytheon.com or Ayre Rosen at ayre.rosen@drexel.edu. WE3G: ANALYSIS AND APPLICATIONS OF LOW PHASE-NOISE OSCILLATING SYSTEM ARRAYS Date & Time: Wednesday, June 15, 1:20–3:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 204 Chair: Viktor Krozer, Technical University of Denmark Co-Chair: Jaijeet Roychowdhury, University of Minnesota WE4A: FUTURE TECHNOLOGIES FOR MICROWAVE/MILLIMETER WAVE APPLICATIONS Date & Time: Wednesday, June 15, 3:30–5:10 PM Sponsors: MTT-1, Computer-Aided Design MTT-11, Microwave Measurements Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 101 Chair: John Horton, J.B. Horton Group USA Co-Chair: Timothy Lee, The Boeing Co. This session covers the progress in linear and nonlinear analysis methods for coupled oscillators and oscillator coupling in array systems. It will also discuss stability analysis of oscillator arrays. The first two papers describe successful methods for coupled oscillator analyses. The following two papers focus on the trade-off between phase accuracy and phase-noise. The last two papers deal with harmonic-balance phase-noise analysis of unforced and injection locked coupled oscillator arrays. This session reports on the status of development in five technology areas that could provide enhanced system performance through the application of microwave and millimeter-wave technology to systems. Technologies being investigated include carbon nanotube devices, devices developed on diamond substrate, MEMS applications in microwave systems, photonic devices for direct modulation and new circuit designs for future systems. [see page 55 for Wednesday Panel Sessions] 35 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2005 WE1A-1: Transmit Receive Module for Space Ground Link Subsystem (SGLS) and Unified S-band (USB)Satellite Telemetry, Tracking and Commanding (TT&C) and Comm. S. Bharj, M. Thaduri, N. Patel, L. Qu, Princeton Microwave Tech.; P. Oleski, R.W. Patton, Air Force Research Lab/IFGC 8:20 AM WE1B-1: Spurious Mode Supression in Coupled Resonator Filters G.G. Fattinger, M.R. Fattinger, K. Diefenbeck, P. Moller, R. Aigner, Infineon Technologies AG 9:10 AM WE1A-5: Adaptive Power Controllable Retrodirective Array System for Portable Battery Operated Applications S. Lim, K.M. Leong, T. Itoh, University of California, Los Angeles WE1D-1: Large Signal Modeling of High Voltage GaAs Power HBTs M. Rudolph, R. Doerner, Ferdinand-BraunInstitut (FBH) WE1D-3: Improvement of PHEMT Intermodulation Prediction Through the Accurate Modeling of Low Frequency Dispersion Effects A. Raffo, G. Vannini, Univ. of Ferra; A. Santarelli, P. Traverso, F. Filicori, Univ. of Bologna; M. Pagani, F. Palomba, CiRiTel; F. Scappaviva, MEC srl WE1A-3: Design of MMIC Based Electronically Steerable RF MultiBeamformer for 3D Radars S. P, A.K. Singh, M.R. Y, Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE); C. S, Center for Air Borne Systems (CABS) WE1A-4: A Retrodirective Array with Interference Rejection Capability D.S. Goshi, K.M. Leong, T. Itoh, University of California, Los Angeles WE1D Non-Linear Device Modeling Chair: Y. Tajima LBCC 201B WE1C-2: Development of a Multi-layer SU-8 Process for Terahertz Frequency Waveguide Blocks C. H. Smith, H. Xu, N. S. Barker, University of Virginia, Charlottesville WE1B-3: Simulation of Stressed FBAR Thanks to a Perturbation Method J. Masson, A. Reinhardt, S. Ballandras, Institut FEMTO-ST WE1C-3: High Efficiency Heterostructure Barrier Varactor Frequency Triplers Using AlN Substrates Q. Xiao, J.L. Hesler, T.W. Crowe, R.M. Weikle, Y. Duan, B.S. Deaver, University of Virginia, Charlottesville WE1B-4: Study on Photo-induced Acoustic Charge Transport Effect in GaN Film K. Hohkawa, C. Kaneshiro, K. Koh, Kanagawa Institute of Technology; K. Nishimura, N. Shigekawa, Nippon Telephon & Telegraph Co. WE1D-4: Nonlinear HEMT Modeling Using Artificial Neural Network Technique J. Gao, L. Zhang, J. Xu, Q. Zhang, Carleton University WE1C-4: Semimetal Semiconductor Junctions for Low Noise Zero-bias Rectifiers A.C. Young, J.D. Zimmerman, E.R. Brown, A.C. Gossard, University of California Santa Barbara WE1D-5: Efficient PA Modeling Using Neural Network and Measurement Set-up for Memory Effect Characterization in the Power Device A.M. Ahmed, E.R. Srinidhi, G. Kompa, University of Kassel WE1C-5: Design and Characterization of 180 GHz Filters in Photoimageable Thick-film Technology D. Stephens, University of Surrey; P.R. Young, University of Kent; I.D. Robertson, University of Leeds WE1D-6: A State-space Modeling Approach for Dynamic Nonlinear Microwave System Based on Large Signal Time Domain Measurements A. Cidronali, C. Accillaro, G. Manes, University of Florence; M. Myslinski, D. Schreurs, KU Leuven WE1B-5: Theoretical and Experimental Results of Ultra Wide Band and Arbitrary Band Width Ladder Type SAW Filters Using Ultra-high Coupling Zero TCF SiO2/Y-X LiNbO3 Substrates K. Yamanouchi, Y. Satoh, H. Isono, D. Kawasaki, Tohoku Institute of Technology WE1B-6: Behavior of BAW Devices at High Power Levels R. Aigner, N. Huynh, M. Handtmann, S. Marksteiner, Infineon Technologies AG 9:20 AM 9:30 AM WE1C-1: Integrated THz Receivers Based on NbN HEB Mixers and InP MMIC IF Amplifiers F. Rodriguez-Morales, S. Yngvesson, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 8:00–9:40 AM WE1D-2: Design of Power FETs Based on Coupled Electro-Thermal-Electromagnetic Modeling D. Denis, I.C. Hunter, School of Electronic & Electrical Engineering; C.M. Snowden, Filtronic Compound Semiconductor Ltd. WE1A-2: A Broadband Millimeter-wave Dual Polarized Phased Array for Radar Front End Applications L. Schulwitz, A. Mortazawi, University of Michigan 8:30 AM 8:40 AM WE1C Components and Technologies for THz Applications Chair: E. Bryerton Co-chair: L. Samoska LBCC 103AB 9:00 AM 8:50 AM IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS WE1B Microwave Acoustic Devices Chair: C. Ruppel Co-chair: R. Weigel LBCC 102 WE1B-2: High-tone Bulk Acoustic Resonator Integrated with FBAR Filter on a Single Chip W. Pang, H. Zhang, J. Kim, H. Yu, E. Kim, University of Southern California 8:10 AM 8:00 AM WE1A Phased Arrays and Retrodirective Systems Chair: R.Y. Miyamoto Co-chair: J. Navarro LBCC 101 WE1A-6: A Combined Distributed Amplifier/True-time Delay Phase Shifter for Broadband Self-steering Arrays G.S. Shiroma, R.Y. Miyamoto, W.A. Shiroma, University of Hawaii 36 WE1F Bandstop and Dual Resonator Filters Chair: I. Hunter LBCC 203 WE1G Baluns and Transmission Structures Chair: J. Taub Co-chair: C. Buntschuh LBCC 204 WE1E-1: 150 W GaN-on-Si RF Power Transistors W. Nagy, S. Singhal, R. Borges, W. Johnson, J. Brown, R. Therrien, A. Chaudhari, A. Hanson, J. Riddle, S. Booth, P. Rajagopal, E. Piner, K. Linthicum, Nitronex Corp. WE1F-1: Compact, Frequency-agile, Absorptive Bandstop Filters D.R. Jachowski, Naval Research Laboratory WE1G-1: Is the Second Order Lattice Balun a Good Solution in MMICs? A Comparison with a Direct Coupled Transformer Balun D.U. Kuylenstierna, P. Linner, B. Hansson, Chalmers University of Technology WE1E-2: High Power, High Efficiency, AlGaN/GaN HEMT Technology for Wireless Base Station Applications R. Vetury, Y. Wei, D. Green, S. Gibb, T. Mercier, K. Leverich, P. Garber, M. Poulton, J.B. Shealy, RF Micro Devices WE1F-2: Perfectly Matched Bandstop Filters Using Lossy Resonators A.C. Guyette, I.C. Hunter, R.D. Pollard, University of Leeds; D.R. Jachowski, Naval Research Lab WE1G-2: Analysis and Design of Compact Wideband Baluns on Multilayer Liquid Crystalline Polymer (LCP) Based Substrates V. Govind, W. Yun, V. Sundaram, M. Swaminathan, Georgia Institute of Technology; S. Dalmia, G. White, Jacket Micro Devices Inc. WE1E-4: A C-band AlGaN/GaN HEMT with CatCVD SiN Passivation Developed for an Over 100 W Operation Y. Kamo, T. Kuniim H. Takeuchi, Y. Yamamoto, M. Totsuka, T. Shiga, H. Minami, T. Kitano, S. Miyakuni, T. Oku, A. Inoue, T. Nanjo, Y. Tsuyama, R. Shirahana, K. Iyomasa, K. Yamanaka, T. Ishikawa, T. Takagi, K. Marumoto, Y. Matsuda, Mitsubishi Elec. Corp. WE1F-3: High Rejection Multilayer C-band DBR Planar Filter Y. Clavet, E. Rius, C. Quendo, C. Person, J. Favennec, LEST-UMR CNRS; C. Zanchi, CNES; P. Moroni, J. Cayrou, J. Cazaux, Alcatel Space WE1G-3: Wideband, Low Loss and Compact 3D LTCC Balun with Asymmetric Structure for Millimeter-wave Applications N. Kidera, S. Watanabe, K. Watanabe, Asahi Glass Co. Ltd.; S. Pinel, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology WE1E-5: Dynamic Gate Bias Technique for Improved Linearity of GaN HFET Power Amplifiers A.M. Conway, Y. Zhao, P.M. Asbeck, University of California, San Diego; M. Micovic, J.S. Moon, HRL Labs LLC WE1F-4: Ku-band Microstrip Diplexer Based on Dual Behavior Resonator Filter A. Manchec, E. Rius, C. Quendo, C. Person, J. Favennec, LEST – UMR CNRS; P. Moroni, J. Cayrou, J. Cazaux, Alcatel Space WE1F-5: Miniaturized High Rejection C-band Planar Band-pass Filter for a Spatial Application E. Rius, C. Quendo, Y. Clavet, A. Manchec, C. Person, J. Favennec, LEST; P. Moroni, J. Cayrou, J. Cazaux, Alactel Space 9:30 AM WE1F-6: Dual-band Filters for WLAN Applications on Liquid Crystal Polymer Technology R. Bairavasubramanian, S. Pinel, J. Papapolymerou, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology; C. Quendo, E. Rius, A. Manchec, C. Person, LEST - UMR CNRS WE1G-5: Narrow Passband Response of Unbalanced CRLH Transmission Line Structure Composed of Capacitively Coupled Dielectric Resonators Y. Horii, Kansai University; C. Caloz, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal; T. Itoh, University of California at Los Angeles 9:20 AM 9:10 AM WE1E-6: Experimental Investigation of DCRF Dispersion in AlGaN/GaN HFET GaAs Using Pulsed I-V and Time-domain Waveform Measurements P. McGovern, P. Tasker, Cardiff University WE1G-4: An Ultra-wideband Microwave Balun Using a Tapered Coaxial Coil Structure Working from kHz Range to Beyond 26.5 GHz G. A. Hofbauer, Hofbauer & Stock Microwave Corp. WE1E-7: High Temperature Operation of AlGaN/GaN HEMT N. Adachi, Y. Tateno, S. Mizuno, A. Kawano, J. Nikaido, S. Sano, Eudyna Device Corp. 37 WEDNESDAY WE1E-3: C-band Single-chip GaN-FET Power Amplifiers with 60 W Output Power Y. Okamoto, A. Wakejima, Y. Ando, T. Nakayama, K. Matsunaga, H. Miyamoto, R&D Association for Future Electron Devices 9:00 AM 8:50 AM 8:40 AM 8:30 AM 8:20 AM 8:10 AM 8:00 AM WE1E HighPower GaN Devices Chair: A. Platzker Co-chair: J.L. Heaton LBCC 202 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS WE2B Tunable Dielectric Materials and Devices Chair: B. York Co-chair: S. Gevorgian LBCC 102 WE2C Terahertz Imaging Focused Session Chair: P. Siegel Co-chair: K. Mizuno LBCC 103AB WE2A-1: A Phase and Amplitude Control Front End Chip in SiGe for Phased-Array Cband Radar Applications H. Thiesies, H. Berg, Ericsson Microwave Systems AB WE2B-1: Demonstration of 124°/dB Phase Tuning at 30 GHz for a Bulk Ferroelectric Beam Steering Device O. Tageman, S. Gevorgian, L. Carlsson, Ericsson AB; D. Iddles, Filtronic Comtek; P. Filhol, Temex; V.O. Sherman, A.K. Tagantsev, EPFL WE2A-2: Ka-band 32 GHz Planar Integrated Switched-beam Smart Antenna A. Liu, C.C. Tzuang, R. Wu, National Taiwan University; H. Wu, National Chiao-Tung University WE2B-2: Cost Effective Ferroelectric Thick Film Phase Shifter Based on Screen Printing Technology W. Hu, D. Zhang, M.J. Lancaster, K. Yeo, T.W. Button, B. Su, Emerging Device Technology Centre WE2A-3: A Uni-planar Fed 2-D Slot Array for Digital Beamforming S. Kim, Y.E. Wang, University of California, Los Angeles WE2B-3: A Tunable Combline Bandpass Filter Using Barium Strontium Titanate Interdigital Varactors on an Alumina Substrate J. Nath, D. Ghosh, W.M. Fathelbab, J. Maria, A.I. Kingon, P.D. Franzon, M.B. Steer, North Carolina State University WE2C-1: Invited: Terahertz Space Applications and Technology P. De Maagt, Electromagnetics Division, European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC), European Space Agency; J. Charlton, Sula Systems Ltd. WE2C-2: Invited: Terahertz Imaging Appl. in Spectroscopy of Biomolecules E. Bründermann, U. Heugen, A. Bergner, R. Schiwon, B. Born, G.W. Schwaab, M. Heyden, M. Krüger, I. Kopf, G. Wollny, J. Samson, S. Ebbinghaus, K. Schröck, M. Havenith, Ruhr-Univ. Bochum; D.R. Chamberlin, Agilent; E.E. Haller, UC Berke WE2A-4: Wideband Reflective Array Based on Loaded Metal Rings A.E. Martynyuk, J.I. Martinez Lopez, J. Rodriguez Cuevas, UNAM, Mexico; Y.K. Sydoruk, NTUU Kiev Polytechnic Institute 11:10 AM WE2A-5: Reduction of Mutual Coupling in Active Antenna Arrays by Optimized Interfacing between Antennas and Amplifiers T.M. Brauner, Elektrobit AG; R. Vogt, W. Bachtold, ETH Zurich WE2B-5: Continuously Tunable Impedance Matching Network Using Ferroelectric Varactors P. Scheele, F. Goelden, A. Giere, S. Mueller, R. Jakoby, TU Darmstadt WE2C-4: Invited: Terahertz Surface and Interface Characterization T. Löffler, K.J. Siebert, T. Hahn, G. Loata, R. Wipf, M. Kreß, M. Thomson, H.G. Roskos, Physikalisches Institut, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitat; N. Hasegawa, Nippon Steel Corp. WE2B-6: Microwave Planar Capacitors Employing Low Loss, High-K and Tunable BZN Thin Films J. Park, J. Lu, S. Stemmer, R.A. York, University of California, Santa Barbara 11:20 AM 11:30 AM 11:40 AM WE2C-3: Invited: New Applications of Millimeter-wave Incoherent Imaging K. Mizuno, H. Matono, Y. Wagatsuma, S. Miyanaga, Research Institute of Electrical Communication, Tohoku Univ.; H. Warashina, Sendai National College of Technology; H. Sato, Y. Yamanaka, EE Dept., Tohoku Univ. WE2B-4: LTCC Compartible Ferroelectric Phase Shifters A.N. Deleniv, S.S. Gevorgian, Chalmers University of Technology; H. Jantunnen, T. Hu, University of Oulu 11:00 AM 10:50 AM 10:40 AM 10:30 AM 10:20 AM 10:10 AM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2005 WE2A Smart Antennas and Beam Forming Techniques Chair: A. Mortazawi Co-chair: W. Shiroma LBCC 101 WE2A-6: A New Beam Direction Finding Circuit Based on Six Port Technology S.O. Tatu, T.A. Denidni, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique INRS-EMT WE2B-7: Characterization of Thin Film BST Tunable Capacitors Using A Simple Two Port Measurement Technique X. Zhu, D. Chen, Z. Jin, J.D. Phillips, A. Mortazawi, University of Michigan WE2C-5: Invited: Development of a Handheld TPI System for Medical Applications V.P. Wallace, A.J. Fitzgerald, B. Robertson, B. Cole, Teraview Ltd.; E. Pickwell, Cambridge University WE2B-8: Intermodulation Distortion in Wide-band Dual-mode Bulk Ferroelectric Bandpass Filters T. Chakraborty, I. Hunter, R. Kurchania, A. Bell, University of Leeds; S. Chakraborty, University of Cambridge 38 10:10–11:50 AM WE2D A Tribute to Harold Sobol Special Session Chair: D. McQuiddy Co-chair: J. Horton LBCC 201B 10:10 AM WE2F Ultra Wideband and Extended Stopband Filters Chair: Q.R. Chen LBCC 203 WE2G Novel Components Chair: J. Owens Co-chair: C. Nguyen LBCC 204 WE2E-1: Wideband Envelope Elimination and Restoration Power Amplifier with High Efficiency Wideband Envelope Amplifier for WLAN 802.11g Applications F. Wang, D. Kimball, J. Popp, A. Yang, D.Y. Lie, P. Asbeck, L. Larson, University of California at San Diego WE2F-1: An Ultra-wideband Bandpass Filter Using Broadside-coupled Microstripcoplanar Waveguide Structure K. Li, D. Kurita, T. Matsui, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NiCT) WE2G-1: High Performance Micro-machined Inductors on CMOS Substrate D. Weon, J. Kim, J. Jeon, S. Mohammadi, L. P. Katehi, Purdue University WE2E-2: Enhanced Linearity and Efficiency of HBT Power Amplifiers for 5 GHz WirelessLANs T. Oka, M. Hasegawa, K. Fujita, M. Yamashita, M. Hirata, H. Kawamura, K. Sakuno, Sharp Corp. WE2F-2: Microstrip Bandpass Filters for Ultra-wideband (UWB) Wireless Communications C. Hsu, F. Hsu, J. Kuo, National Chiao Tung University WE2G-2: Design of Toroidal Inductors Using Stressed Metal Technology J. Kim, D. Weon, J. Jeon, S. Mohammadi, L.P. Katehi, Purdue University WE2E-3: CDMA Handset Power Amplifier with Diode Load Modulator S. Kim, K. Lee, B. Kim, POSTECH; P.J. Zampardi, Skyworks Solutions Inc. WE2F-3: Microstrip Bandpass Filters with Ultra-broad Rejection Band Using Stepped Impedance Resonator and High-impedance Transformer H. Wang, L. Zhu, Nanyang Technological University 11:00 AM 11:20 AM WE2E-6: Switch Less Impedance Matching type W-CDMA Power Amplifier with Improved Efficiency and Linearity under Low Power Operation T. Tanoue, M. Ohnishi, H. Matsumoto, Central Research Laboratory, Hitachi, Ltd. 11:40 AM WE2E-5: A Novel Tunable Broadband Power Amplifier Module Operating from 0.8 GHz to 2.0 GHz H. Zhang, H. Gao, G. Li, University of California, Irvine 11:30 AM 11:10 AM WE2E-4: A 900/1500/2000 MHz Triple-band Reconfigurable Power Amplifier Employing RF-MEMS Switches A. Fukuda, H. Okazaki, S. Narahashi, Y. Yamao, NTT DoCoMo Inc.; T. Hirota, Kanazawa Institute of Technology WE2F-4: Parallel-coupled Microstrip Filters with Over-coupled Stages for Multispurious Suppression J. Kuo, M. Jiang, M. Wu, National Chiao Tung University WE2F-5: Miniature Microstrip Parallelcoupled Bandpass Filters Based on Lumpeddistributed Coupled-line Sections Y. Lin, H. Yang, C. Chen, Graduate Institute of Communication Engineering WE2G-4: An Integrated RF Balanced-filter with Enhanced Rejection Characteristics L.K. Yeung, K. Wu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong WE2F-6: Serially-connected-series-stub Resonators and Their Applications in Coplanar Stripline Bandpass Filter Design N. Yang, Z. Chen, X. Qing, Y. Guo, Institute for Infocomm Research WE2G-5: Ultra-wideband Differential Mode Bandpass Filters Embedded in Selfcomplementary Antennas A. Saitou, K. Sato, T. Koyama, K. Watanabe, YKC Corp.; H. Aoki, N. Satomi, K. Honjo, The University Electro-Communications WE2E-7: A High Efficiency, High Voltage, Balanced Cascode FET A. Inoue, S. Goto, T. Kunii, T. Ishikawa, Y. Matsuda, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. 39 WEDNESDAY WE2G-3: Design of Ring Resonator Mode Spacing and Bandwidth Using the Phase Response of Composite Right/Left Handed Transmission Lines C.A. Allen, K.M. Leong, T. Itoh, UCLA 10:50 AM 10:40 AM 10:30 AM 10:20 AM WE2E Power Amplifiers for Wireless Aplications Chair: P. Zampardi Co-chair: A-V. Pham LBCC 202 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2005 WE3A-1: An Active Interference Canceller for Multistandard Collocated Radio A. Raghavan, M.M. Tentzeris, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology; E. Gebara, Quellan Inc. WE3B MEMS Device Technology Chair: B. Pillans Co-chair: D. Peroulis LBCC 102 WE3C Tunable and Active Filters Chair: P. Blondy LBCC 103AB WE3B-1: Miniature RF MEMS Switched Capacitors D. Mercier, K. Van Caekenberghe, G. Rebeiz, University of Michigan WE3C-1: Tunable Planar Combline Filter with Multiple Source/Load Coupling M. Sanchez-Renedo, J.I. Alonso, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid 1:40 PM WE3B-2: A High-Q Low Voltage HARPSS Tunable Capacitor P. Monajemi, F. Ayazi, Georgia Institute of Technology WE3D-1: Accurate and Efficient InCorp. of Frequency-domain Data within Linear and Non-linear Time-domain Transient Simulation T. Brazil, University College Dublin WE3C-3: Single Switch Reconfigurable Bandpass Filter with Variable Bandwidth Using a Dual-mode Triangular Patch Resonator C.A. Lugo, J. Papapolymerou, Georgia Instititute of Technology WE3D-3: Harmonic-balance Technique for the Shortening of the Initial Transient of Microwave Oscillators F. Ramérez, A. Suärez, University of Cantabria 2:00 PM 1:50 PM WE3A-2: Novel High-rejection LTCC Diplexers for Dual-band WLAN Application D. Orlenko, K. Markov, S. Royak, A. Gordiyenko, O. Chernyakov, T. Kerssenbrock, G. Sevskiy, P. Heide, EPCOS AG 2:10 PM WE3B-3: Modeling and Characterization of Dielectric Charging Effects in RF MEMS Capacitive Switches X. Yuan, J.C. Hwang, Lehigh University; D. Forehand, C.L. Goldsmith, MEMtronics Corp. WE3C-4: Antenna Impedance Mismatch Measurement and Correction for Adaptive CDMA Transceivers D. Qiao, Y. Zhao, T. Hung, D. Kimball, M. Li, P. M. Asbeck, University of California, San Diego; D. Choi, Nokia; D. Kelly, Peregrine Semiconductor 2:20 PM WE3D-4: Large-signal Stability Analysis of Microwave Amplifiers under Complex Modulated Signals with Time-varying Envelope A. Collado, A. Suarez, University of Cantabria; J.M. Collantes, University of the Basque Country WE3A-4: A Single Chip SiGe BiCMOS Transceiver and SiGe Power Amplifier for 5.8 GHz WDCT Applications R. Reimann, G. Krimmer, W. Bischof, S. Gerlach, Atmel Germany GmbH WE3B-4: Modeling of the Dielectric Charging Kinetic for Capacitive RF-MEMS S. Melle, D. De Conto, L. Mazenq, D. Dubuc, K. Grenier, L. Bary, R. Plana, LAAS-CNRS; O. Vendier, J. Muraro, J. Cazaux, Alcatel Space WE3C-5: New MMIC Approach for Low Noise High Order Active Filters L. Darcel, P. Dueme, R. Funck, Thales Airborne Systems; G. Alquie, University of Pierre et Marie Curie WE3D-5: Circuit-level Nonlinear/Electromagnetic Co-simulation of an Entire Microwave Link V. Rizzoli, A. Costanzo, D. Masotti, P. Spadoni, University of Bologna WE3C-6: Active Impedance Profil Technique for Selective Tunable Active Filter with Gain S. Dardillac, L. Billonnet, B. Jarry, IRCOM WE3D-6: Inferring Nonlinear Distortion Performance of Power Amplifiers Subject to Telecommunications Signals from Two Tone Measurements J.C. Pedro, N.B. Carvalho, Universidade de Aveiro WE3B-5: On the Dielectric Polarization Effects in Capacitive RF-MEMS Switches G. Papaioannou, M. Exarchos, V. Theonas, The University of Athens; G. Wang, J. Papapolymerou, Georgia Institute of Technology 2:40 PM 2:30 PM WE3D Advances in Nonlinear Simulation Techniques Chair: A. Suarez Co-chair: V. Rizzoli LBCC 201B WE3D-2: Simulation of Nonlinear RF Circuits Driven By Multi-carrier Modulated Signals N.B. Carvalho, J.C. Pedro, Universidade de Aveiro; W. Jang, M.B. Steer, North Carolina State University WE3A-3: Bandpass Pulse-width Modulation (BP-PWM) S. Rosnell, J. Varis, Nokia 2:50 PM 1:20–3:00 PM WE3C-2: Novel Tunable Lowpass Filters Using Folded Slots Etched in the Ground Plane R. Zhang, R.R. Mansour, University of Waterloo 1:30 PM 1:20 PM WE3A Advances in Wireless Subsystem Technologies Chair: J. Lin Co-chair: O. Boric-Lubecke LBCC 101 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS WE3A-5: A Highly Integrated Dual Band Receiver IC for DAB Y.H. Chen, S.F. Chen, C.F. Lee, K.C. Juang, Y.L. Yu, T.Y. Yang, Industrial Technology Research Institute WE3B-6: Wide-band Low-loss MEMS Packaging Technology J.B. Muldavin, C. Bozler, S. Rabe, C. Keast, MIT Lincoln Lab 40 WE3F Advanced Packaging Materials and Applications I Chair: B. Kopp Co-chair: K. Goverdhanam LBCC 203 WE3G Analysis and Applications of Low Noise Oscillating System Arrays Focused Session Chair: V. Krozer Co-chair: J. Roychowdhury LBCC 204 WE3E-1: A 28 V Over 300 W GaAs Heterojunction FET with Dual Fieldmodulating Plates for W-CDMA Base Stations K. Ishikura, I. Takenaka, H. Takahashi, M. Kanamori, K. Hasegawa, K. Asano, NEC Compound Semiconductor Devices Ltd. WE3F-1: Noise Reduction and Design Methodology in Mixed Signal Systems with Alternating Impedance Electromagnetic Bandgap (AI-EBG) Structure J. Choi, V. Govind, R. Mandrekar, M. Swaminathan, Georgia Inst. of Tech.; S. Janagama, State Univ. of NY at Stony Brook WE3G-1: Invited: Fast and Accurate Simulation of Coupled Oscillators Using Nonlinear Phase Macromodels X. Lai, J. Roychowdhury, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering WE3E-2: Distributed Effects in High Power RF LDMOS Transistors K. Goverdhanam, W. Dai, M. Frei, D. Farrell, J. Bude, H. Safar, M. Mastrapasqua, T. Bambridge, Agere Systems WE3F-2: Broadband Dual-Via Architectures for Multilayer PCB Signal Injection and Intra-layer Transition C. Metz, A. Lyons, Bell Laboratories-Lucent Technologies; T. Baras, TU Hamburg-Harburg WE3G-2: Invited: Oscillator Dynamics M. Odyniec, Odyniec Consulting WE3E-3: A High Power Density TaN/Au Tgate pHEMT with High Humidity Resistance for Ka-band Applications H. Amasuga, S. Goto, T. Shiga, M. Totsuka, T. Kunii, T. Oku, T. Ishikawa, Y. Matsuda, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. WE3F-3: RF Characteristics of Thin Film Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP) Packages for RF MEMS and MMIC Integration D. Thompson, N. Kingsley, G. Wang, M.M. Tentzeris, J. Papapolymerou, Georgia Institute of Technology WE3G-3: Invited: Phase Noise and Phase Accuracy in Multiphase LC Oscillators C. Samori, DEI-Dipartimento di Elettronica e Informazione, University of Milano 2:30 PM 2:40 PM 2:50 PM WE3G-4: Invited: Trade-off Between Phasenoise and Signal Quadrature in Unilaterally Coupled Oscillators T. Djurhuus, V. Krozer, J. Vidkjær, T.K. Johansen, Technical University of Denmark, Oersted-DTU Dept., Electromagnetic Systems WE3F-4: Magnetically Aligned Anisotropic Conductive Adhesive for High Frequency Interconnects Y. Huang, X. Gong, W.J. Chappell, Purdue University; T. Bruemmer, S.K. Khanna, Nexaura Systems, LLC WE3E-5: Power and Spectral Regrowth Performance of 10 W and 16 W Ka-band Power Amps with Single-chip Output Stages M.P. DeLisio, B.C. Deckman, C. Cheung, S.C. Martin, C.J. Rollison, J.J. Rosenberg, Wavestream Corp.; J. Eisenberg, G. Smith, Xicom Technology WE3E-6: W-band Metamorphic HEMT with 267 mW Output Power K.J. Herrick, K.W. Brown, F.A. Rose, C.S. Whelan, J. Kotce, J.R. Laroche, Y. Zhang, Raytheon WE3G-5: Invited: Harmonic-balance Techniques for the Design of Coupledoscillator Systems in Both Unforced and Injection-locked Operation A. Suárez, A. Collado, F. Ramírez, Communications Engineering Dept., University of Cantabria WE3F-5: Variable Dielectric Constants by Structured Porosity for Passive Ceramic Components W. She, W.J. Chappell, Purdue University; Z.N. Wing, J.W. Halloran, Univeristy of Michigan WE3G-6: Invited: Low Phase Noise Oscillator Modeling in a System Environment R. Quéré, J.C. Nallatamby, A. Layec, M. Prigent, IRCOM-CNRS University of Limoges 41 WEDNESDAY WE3E-4: A Broadband Power Amplifier Design Based on the Extended Resonance Power Combining Technique X. Jiang, A. Mortazawi, Rad Lab 2:20 PM 2:10 PM 2:00 PM 1:50 PM 1:40 PM 1:30 PM 1:20 PM WE3E Advanced Technologies for Power Amplifiers Chair: C. Weitzel Co-chair: P. Asbeck LBCC 202 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2005 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS 3:30–5:10 PM WE4B MEMS Component Technology Chair: J. Hayden Co-chair: B. Lakshminarayanan LBCC 102 WE4C Planar Dual Mode Filters Chair: V.E. Boria LBCC 103AB WE4A-1: Invited: Carbon Nanotube Devices for GHz to THz Applications P.J. Burke, University of California, Irvine WE4B-1: 6-15 GHz RF MEMS Tunable Filters B.W. Pillans, A. Malczewski, R. Allison, J. Brank, Raytheon WE4C-1: New Triangular Microstrip Lopp Resonators For Bandpass Dual-mode Filter Applications R. Wu, S. Amari, Royal Military College of Canada WE4D-1: RF Power Amplifier Behavioral Modeling Using Volterra Expansion with Laguerre Functions A. Zhu, T.J. Brazil, University College Dublin WE4A-2: Invited: Diamond for High Power Electronics E. Kohn, A. Denisenko, University of Ulm WE4B-2: W-band RF MEMS Double and Triple-stub Impedance Tuners G. Rebeiz, University of Michigan; T. VahaHeikkila, J. Varis, J. Tuovinen, MilliLab, VTT Information Technology WE4C-2: Microstrip Dual-mode Band Reject Filter J. Hong, Heriot-Watt University WE4D-2: Detailed Analysis of IMD in an LDMOS RF Power Amplifier J.P. Aikio, T.E. Rahkonen, University of Oulu WE4A-3: Invited: MEMS for Future Microwaves Systems H.J. De Los Santos, NanoMEMS Research; S. Rassoulian, J. Maciel, Radant MEMS WE4B-3: A Novel MEMS Impedance Tuner Simultaneously Optimized for Maximum Impedance Range and Power Handling Y. Lu, The University of Michigan; L.P. Katehi, D. Peroulis, Purdue University WE4C-3: Planar Asymmetric Dual-mode Filters Based on Substrate Integrated waveguide (SIW) X. Chen, Z. Hao, W. Hong, T. Cui, State Key Lab of Millimeter-waves, Southeast University WE4D-3: New Method for Phase Characterization of Nonlinear Distortion Products J.C. Pedro, J.P. Martins, P.M. Cabral, Universidade de Aveiro WE4A-4: Invited: Directly Modulated Photonic Devices for Microwave Applications R.V. Penty, I.H. White, P. Hartmann, J.D. Ingham, X. Qian; Cambridge University WE4B-4: A Single-pole 6 Throw (SP6T) Antenna Switch Using Metal Contact RF MEMS Switches for Multi-band Applications J. Lee, C. Je, S. Kang, C. Choi, Electronics and Telecommunictions Research Institute (ETRI) WE4C-4: LTCC Technology for 40 GHz Bandpass Waveguide Filter R. Valois, D. Baillargeat, S. Verdeyme, IRCOM; M. Lahti, T. Jaakola, VTT Electronics WE4D-4: Behavioral Modeling of RF and Microwave Circuit Blocs for Hierarchical Simulation of Modern Transceivers A. Soury, E. Ngoya, J. Rousset, IRCOM University of Limoges WE4A-5: Invited: Circuit and System Design for Future Microwave Systems L.E. Larson, UC San Diego WE4B-5: Multi-port RF MEMS Waveguide Switch M. Daneshmand, R.R. Mansour, University of Waterloo WE4C-5: Two Simple Implementations of Transversal Filters with Coupling Between Non-resonant Nodes D. Caoete-Rebenaque, F. Quesada-Pereria, J.G. Tornero, J.P. Garcia, A.A. Melcon, Technical University Cartagena WE4D-5: A New PA Behavioral Model Based on the Linearization of Multivariable Nonlinearities and Interpolation Y. Shen, J. Tauritz, University of Twente WE4D Nonlinear Behavioral Modeling of Microwave Circuits and Systems Chair: K. Remley Co-chair: P. Draxler LBCC 201B 5:00 PM 4:50 PM 4:40 PM 4:30 PM 4:20 PM 4:10 PM 4:00 PM 3:50 PM 3:40 PM 3:30 PM WE4A Future Technologies for Microwave/Millimeter-wave Applications Special Session Chair: J. Horton • Co-Chair: T. Lee LBCC 101 42 WE4F Advanced Packaging and Materials II Chair: W. Heinrich Co-chair: R.F. Drayton LBCC 203 WE4G Low Noise Devices and MMICs Chair: J. Whelehan Co-chair: F. Danneville LBCC 204 WE4E-1: Synthesis of a Compound Tjunction for a Two Way Splitter with Arbitrary Power Ratio S. Yang, A.E. Fathy, University of Tennessee WE4F-1: W-band Flip-chip VCO in Thin-film Environment F.J. Schmõckle, F. Lenk, M. Hutter, M. Klein, M. Tõpper, K. Riepe, W. Heinrich, FerdinandBraun-Institut (FBH); H. Oppermann, G. Engelmann, Fraunhofer IZM, United Monolithic Semicon GmbH WE4G-1: An Ultra-low Power InAs/AlSb HEMT W-band Low Noise Amplifier J. Hacker, J. Bergman, G. Nagy, G. Sullivan, B. Brar, Rockwell Scientific Co.; C. Kadow, H. Lin, A. Gossard, M. Rodwell, University of California, Santa Barbara WE4E-2: A Broadband Surface Micromachined 15-45 GHz Microstrip Coupler B. Pan, Y. Yoon, Y. Zhao, J. Papapolymerou, M.M. Tentzeris, M. Allen, Georgia Institute of Technology WE4F-2: The Flip-chip Mounted MMIC Technology Using the Modified MCM-D Substrate for Compact and Low Cost W-band Transceiver S. Song, S. Kim, S. Yeon, S. Park, J. Lee, S. Lee, W. Choi, Y. Kwon, K. Seo, Seoul National University WE4G-2: A Lattice Matched InP Chip Set for a Ka-Band Radiometer D. Kettle, N. Roddis, University of Manchester; R. Sloan, University of Manchester WE4E-3: A Novel 20 to 40 GHz Monolithic Passive Differential Coupler for MMICs Applications K.W. Hamed, A.P. Freundorfer, Queen’s University; Y.M. Antar, Royal Military College of Canada WE4F-3: Monolithic LTCC SiP Transmitter for 60GHz Wireless Communication Terminals Y. Lee, W. Chang, C. Park, Information and Communications University (ICU) WE4G-3: Ka-band (35 GHz) 3-stage SiGe HBT Low Noise Amplifier P.J. Riemer, B.R. Buhrow, J.D. Coker, B.A. Randall, R.W. Techentin, B.K. Gilbert, E.S. Daniel, Mayo Clinic WE4E-4: Design of a Compact Broadband Branch-line Hybrid Y. Chun, J. Hong, Heriot-Watt University WE4F-4: An X-band System-in-package Active Antenna Module N. Khandelwal, R.W. Jackson, University of Massachusetts WE4G-4: A Very Low Power SiGe LNA for UWB Application Y. Park, C. Lee, J.D. Cressler, J. Laskar, Georgia Electronic Design Center; A. Joseph, IBM Microelectronics WE4E-5: A Novel N-port Series Divider Using Infinite Wavelength Phenomena A. Lai, K.M. Leong, T. Itoh, University of California, Los Angeles WE4F-5: An Improved Packaging Technology for RF Power Transistors S. McCarthy, P. Smith, J.L. Walker, Semelab plc WE4G-5: The Extraction and Modeling of Intrinsic RF Noise Sources in 0.13 µm nMOSFETs S. Venkataraman, B. Banerjee, C. Lee, J. D. Cressler, J. Laskar, J. Papapolymerou, Georgia Institute of Technology; A.J. Joseph, S.L. Sweeney, IBM Microelectronics 5:00 PM 4:50 PM 4:40 PM 4:30 PM 43 WEDNESDAY 4:20 PM 4:10 PM 4:00 PM 3:50 PM 3:40 PM 3:30 PM WE4E Couplers, Hybrids and Splitters Chair: A. Fathy Co-chair: M.D. Abouzahra LBCC 202 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2005 • WEIF INTERACTIVE FORUM • 1:30–4:30 PM WEDNESDAY CHAIR: H.J. DE LOS SANTOS, NANOMEMS RESEARCH • CO-CHAIR: R.L. EISENHART, EISENHART & ASSOCIATES • LBCC GRAND BALLROOM WEPA-1: A Frequency-differential Representation of Losses to Express Quality Factor in Terms of Reactance-slope Parameters for Three-dimensional, Arbitrarily-shaped Resonators B.E. Spielman, Washington University in St. Louis WEPA-2: Multipactor Breakdown Prediction in Rectangular Waveguide-based Components C. Vicente, B. Mottet, H.L. Hartnagel, Tech. Univ. Darmstadt; M. Mattes, J. Mosig, Ecole Polytech Federale; D. Wolk, D. Raboso, Tesat-Spacecom, Payload Sys. Div. WEPA-3: Waveguide Dielectric Phase Shifter with Fast Piezoelectric Control V. Kazmirenko, Y. Poplavko, National Technical University of Ukraine; M. Jeong, S. Baik, Pohang University of Science and Technology WEPA-4: Realization Concepts for Compact Microstrip Antennas with Periodically Loaded Lines M. Scheáler, C. Damm, J. Freese, R. Jakoby, TU Darmstadt WEPA-5: Accurate Modal Representation of Arbitrarily Shaped Multiconductor Transmission Lines Enclosed in Homogeneous Waveguides E. Tarõn-Tarõn, P. Soto-Pacheco, V.E. Boria-Esbert, Universidad Politecnica de Valencia WEPA-6: Analysis of Truncated 2D periodic structures A.N. Deleniv, Chalmers University of Technology WEPA-7: High-Q Dielectric Resonator with Operated Slit (Tunability, Thermal Stability, Film Measurements) A. Eremenko, D. Shmigin, V. Pashkov, V. Molchanov, Y. Poplavko, Nat’l Tech. Univ. of Ukraine WEPA-8: Photonic Crystal Non-radiative Dielectric Waveguide S. Tse, P.R. Young, University of Kent WEPA-9: Method of Discrete Singularities in the Accurate Modeling of a Reflector Beam Waveguide A.A. Nosich, Y.V. Gandel, Kharkov National University WEPA-10: Characterization of Stripline Circuit by Planar Circuit/Equivalent Network and Demonstration of its Validity by 1D, 2D and 3D Analysis for Practical Structures J. Hsu, T. Hiraoka, Kanagawa University; T. Ogawa, MEL Inc. WEPB-1: A Congruent Compact Cell Approach for Global EM Analysis of Multi-scale Integrated Circuits S. Wane, H. Baudrand, Enseeiht; D. Bajon, Supaero WEPB-2: Solution of Homogeneous Electromagnetic Problems via the Tracking of the Matrix Eigenvalues: Application to the Analysis of NRD Components M. Bozzi, S. Germani, L. Perregrini, University of Pavia; D. Li, K. Wu, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal WEPC-1: Analysis of Distributed Multi-finger High-power Transistors Using the FDTD Method G.F. Formicone, W. Burger, B. Pryor, Freescale Semiconductors WEPC-2: Circuit Modeling of Resonant Modes in MMIC Packages Using Time Domain Methods B. Neuhaus, A. Beyer, University Duisburg-Essen, Campus Duisburg; T. Bolz, IMST GmbH WEPC-3: Analysis of Multiconductor Transmission Lines with Frequency-dependent Parameters and Incident Electromagnetic Fields G.S. Shinh, N. Nakhla, R. Achar, M. Nakhla, I. Erdin, Carleton University WEPC-4: Time-domain Techniques for Computation and Reconstruction of One-dimensional Profiles M. Rahman, R. Marklein, University of Kassel WEPC-5: High Throughput Transmission Line Matrix (TLM) System in Grid Environment for Microwave Design, Analysis and Optimizations P. Lorenz, J.V. Vital, B. Biscontini, P. Russer, Technical University Munich WEPC-6: The Complex Envelope (CE) ADI-FDTD Method C. Ma, Z.D. Chen, Dalhousie University WEPC-7: Haar-MRTD Time and Space Adaptive Grid Techniques for Practical RF Structures N. Bushyager, M.M. Tentzeris, The Georgia Institute of Technology WEPD-1: A Space Mapping Method Allowing Models with Different Parameter Rank and Physical Meanings for Coarse and Fine Model H. Bilzer, F. Frank, W. Menzel, University of Ulm WEPD-2: Restoration of Passivity in S-parameter Data of Microwave Measurements D. Saraswat, R. Achar, M. Nakhla, Carleton University WEPD-3: Modular Configuration Rprop/SF-ANN for Microwave Waveguide on EBG Structures Modeling E.Q. Fernandes, UERN; P.F. Silva, CEFET-JP; M.B. Melo, UFCG; A.G. D’Assuncao, UFRN-CT-Dee WEPE-1: Implementable Space Mapping Approach to Enhancement of Microwave Device Models J.W. Bandler, Q.S. Cheng, S. Koziel, McMaster University WEPE-2: Empirical Model Generation Techniques for Planar Microwave Components Using Electromagnetic Linear Regression Models J. Hinojosa, G. Domenech, J. Martõnez, J. Garrigõs, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena WEPF-1: New interpolation and Smoothing Techniques for Nonlinear Models R. Follmann, D. Koether, I. Wolff, IMST GmbH WEPF-2: An Electro-thermal HBV Model M. Ingvarson, J. Vukusic, A. Olsen, A. Emadi, J. Stake, Chalmers University of Technology WEPF-3: Large-signal PHEMT Switch Model which Accurately Predicts Harmonics and Two Tone Intermodulation Distortion C. Wei, A. Klimashov, Y. Zhu, E. Lawrence, G. Tkachenko, C. Zhang, Skyworks Solution Inc. WEPF-4: A General Procedure for Extraction of Bias Dependent Dynamic Self Heating Model Parameters K. Andersson, C. Fager, Chalmers University of Technology; J.C. Pedro, Instituto de Telecomunicaqes, WEPF-5: A Verilog-based Temperature-dependent BSIM4 Model for RF Power LD-MOSFETs M.N. Marbell, J. Hwang, Lehigh University; W. Dai, M. Frei, A. Shibib, Agere Systems WEPF-6: Large Signal HBT Model with Measurement-based Charge Formulations S. Cheon, J. Lim, D. Park, Knowledge*on Semiconductor Inc.; J. Park, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. WEPG-1: Ultra Low Noise Low Cost Ultra Wideband N-Push VCO U.L. Rohde, A.K. Poddar, Synergy Microwave Corp. WEPG-2: A Ka-band Direct Oscillation HBT VCO MMIC with Parallel Negative Resistor Circuit K. Choumei, T. Matsuzuka, S. Suzuki, N. Ogawa, M. Komaru, Y. Matsuda, S. Hamano, K. Kawakami, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. WEPG-3: High Temperature Performance of a SiC MESFET Based Oscillator Z.D. Schwartz, Analex Corp. at NASA Glenn Research Center; G.E. Ponchak, NASA Glenn Research Center WEPG-4: Spurious Suppression Scheme by Phase Difference Control For Delta-Sigma FractionalN PLL Synthesizer with Analog PD K. Tajima, R. Hayashi, T. Takagi, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. WEPG-5: Linear Analysis of Ring-type Coupled ILO Array C. Hsiao, T. Chu, National Taiwan University WEPG-6: On Orbit Programmable Frequency Generation System for JCSAT 9 Spacecraft L. Dayaratna, L.G. Ramos, M. Hirokawa, S. Valenti, Lockheed Martin Commercial Space WEPG-7: Power Efficient RF Pulse Compression Through Switched Resonators S. Kim, X. Xu, Y.E. Wang, University of California, Los Angeles WEPH-1: Compact Colinear End-launcher for Rectangular Waveguides M. Simeoni, C. Coman, I.E. Lager, Delft University of Technology WEPH-2: Novel Integrated Coaxial Line to Cylindrical Waveguide Directive Couplers in Pipelines for Process Monitoring Applications A. Penirschke, J. Freese, R. Jakoby, Technische Universitaet Darmstadt; B. Allenberg, J. Biebel, Schenck Process GmbH WEPI-1: A New Planar Marchand Balun Z. Zhang, Y. Guo, L. Ong, M. Chia, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore WEPI-2: Miniaturization and Harmonic Suppression of Branch-line and Rat-race Hybrid Coupler Using Compensated Spiral Compact Microstrip Resonant Cell J. Gu, C. Wang, X. Sun, Shanghai Institute of Microsystem & Information Technology of Chinese Academy of Science WEPI-3: Design of Dual-band Waveguide Transformers U. Rosenberg, Marconi Communications GmbH; J. Bornemann, University of Victoria; S. Amari, Royal Military College of Canada WEPI-4: Ridge Waveguide Branch-line Directional Couplers for Wideband Applications and LTCC Technology J.A. Ruiz-Cruz, J.M. Rebollar, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; Y. Zhang, K.A. Zaki, University of Maryland; A.J. Piloto, Kyocera America WEPI-5: Matched Symmetrical Six-port Microstrip Coupler Y. Chen, S.P. Yeo, National University of Singapore WEPI-6: Compact Top-wall Hybrid/Coupler Design for Extreme Broad Bandwidth Applications R. Beyer, Mician GmbH; U. Rosenberg, Marconi Communications GmbH WEPI-7: Design of Novel Attenuator Structure with Quad Spiral Shaped Defected Ground Structure Y. Jeong, D. Ahn, Soonchunhyang University WEPI-8: Size Reduction of Coupled-microstrip 3 dB Forward Couplers by Loading with Periodic Shunt Capacitive Stubs T. Fujii, I. Ohta, University of Hyogo WEPI-9: A Novel Design of High Directivity CPW Directional Coupler Design by Using DGS D. Kim, Y. Jeong, J. Kang, J. Kim, D. Ahn, Soonchunhyang University; C. Kim, RRC for Wireless Communication Devices WEPI-10: Dev. of a Low-loss Multilayered Broadband Balun Using Twin-thickness Thin-film A.C. Chen, A.H. Pham, University of California; R.E. Leoni, Raytheon Co. WEPI-11: Design of Broadband Semi-lumped and Lumped Element Quadrature Hybrids J. Yamasaki, I. Ohta, T. Kawai, Y. Kokubo, University of Hyogo WEPJ-1: Folded-waveguide Resonator Filters J. Hong, Heriot-Watt University WEPJ-2: Modular Design of Dual-mode Filters Using Elliptic Cavities S. Amari, Royal Military College of Canada; U. Rosenberg, Marconi Communications, GmbH WEPJ-3: Waveguide Filters with Ridged and Unequal Width Resonators N. Yildirim, A. Hizal, Middle East Technical University WEPJ-4: An Efficient Optimization Design of a Manifold Multiplexer Using an Accurate Equivalent Circuit Model of Coupling Irises of Channel Filters M. Uhm, J. Lee, J. Park, ETRI; J. Kim, Chung-Ang Univ. WEPK-2: A 20 GHz MOD-made BST Thin Film Tunable Phase Shifter for Phase Adjustment of Digital 360° PHEMT Phase Shifter M. Noda, D. Popovici, M. Okuyama, Osaka Univ.; Y. Sasaki, M. Komaru, Mitsubishi Elect.Corp. WEPK-3: Thickness Dependences on Microwave Tunable Properties for (Ba,Sr)TiO3 Thin Films in Planar Capacitor Structure. K. Kageyama, A. Sakurai, A. Ando, Y. Sakabe, Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. WEPK-4: Wide Piezoelectric Tuning of LTCC Bandpass Filters M. Al-Ahmad, R. Maenner, R. Matz, Siemens AG; P. Russer, Technische Universitaet Muenchen WEPK-5: Electrically Tunable and Temperature Compensated FBAR W. Pang, H. Yu, H. Zhang, E. Kim, University of Southern California WEPL-1: Accurate In-situ Monitoring of Q-factor and BER Using Adaptive Sampling in a 10 Gb/s CMOS Optical Receiver IC Y. Chang, S. Killmeyer, B. Gomatam, Vitesse Semiconductor Corp. WEPL-2: A 1 GHz Continuous-Time Sigma-Delta A/D Converter in 90 nm Standard CMOS R. Schoofs, M. Steyaert, W. Sansen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven WEPL-3: Design Rules for Mode Conversion Reduction in High-speed On-chip Interconnects Y. Quere, T. Le Gouguec, P. Martin, D. Le Berre, F. Huret, Laboratoire d’Electronique et Systemes de Telecommunications UMR WEPM-1: A 50 W LDMOS Current Mode 1800 MHz Class-D Power Amplifier J. Kim, S. Stapleton, D. Han, J. Kim, Kwangwoon University WEPO-1: A Novel Process-controlled-monitor Structure Suitable for RF CMOS Characterization C. Chiu, G. Huang, D. Chiu, K. Chen, M. Cho, S. Wang, National Nano Device Labs WEPO-2: A Novel Multiresolution High-dynamic Ultra-broadband Time-domain EMI Measurement System S. M. Braun, A. Alt, P. Russer, Technische Universitet Menchen WEPO-3: Unified Parasitic De-Embedding Methodology of On-wafer Multi-port Device Characterization M. Cho, G. Huang, C. Chiu, K. Chen, National Nano Device Labs WEPO-4: Active Harmonic Load-pull for Charachterizing Highly Mismatched High Power Transistors Z. E. Aboush, J. Lees, J. Benedikt, P. Tasker, Cardiff University WEPO-5: A Signal Model to Extract Intrinsic Parameters of High-Q Dielectric Resonators from Noisy Measurements K. Naishadham, J.E. Piou, MIT Lincoln Lab WEPP-1: Application of the Multiplicative Regularized Contrast Source Inversion Method to Real Biological Data A. Abubakar, Schlumberger-Doll Research; S.Y. Semenov, V.G. Posukh, Carolinas Medical Center; P.M. van den Berg, Delft University of Technology WEPP-2: The Scaled SAM Models and SAR for Handset exposure at 835 MHz A. Lee, H. Choi, J. Choi, Elec. and Telecom.Research Institute; J. Pack, Chungnam Nat’l Univ. WEPP-3: Influence of the Ear’s Morphology on Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) Induced in a Child Head Using Two Source Models. A. Hadjem, C. Dale, M. Wong, J. Wiart, France Telecom; D. Lautru, V. Fouad Hanna, Univ. Pierre & Marie Curie; N. Gadi, I. Bloch, Ecole Nationale Superieure des Telecommunications WEPQ-1: Detection of Moving Targets by Ground Bistatic Radar G.A. Andreyev, Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics; A.V. Zhuravlev, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology WEPQ-2: Radar Imaging Using Noncoherent Sensors F.B. Helmbrecht, E.M. Biebl, TU Muenchen WEPQ-3: Robust Passive Shaping Network for Impulse Radio and UWB Signal Generator A. Mollfulleda, J. Mateu, CTTC; P. Miskovsky, UPC 44 PANEL SESSIONS PMA: CMOS PAS STEP ON THE GAAS! Date & Time: Monday, June 13, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Ctr., Grand Ballroom 1 Organizers: Fazal Ali, Nokia Mike Golio, RF Power Devices Panel: Sponsor: PTUB: OUTSOURCING – THE IMPACT ON THE MICROWAVE INDUSTRY Date & Time: Tuesday, June 14, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Location: Organizer and Moderator: Ferdo Ivanek, Stanford University Aditya Gupta, Anadigics Julio Costa, RFMD Pete Zampardi, Skyworks Ali Hajimari, Axiom/Caltech Shankar Krishnamurty, VT Silicon Research and development of RF/microwave power amplifiers based on CMOS technology has been ongoing for the last decade. In the past year, some CMOS based mobile phone product offerings have been demonstrated. Could this represent the beginning of the end for GaAs HBT and Si BJT technologies... or are CMOS PAs ultimately destined for the ash heap? Although the physical limitations of CMOS devices ensure that the incumbent (GaAs HBT and Silicon BJT) technologies will always be preferred for the mobile phone’s power amplifier from a pure performance perspective, can the CMOS PAs offer other compelling advantages? The experts on our panel will discuss the performance (RF, thermal, robustness), process technology, cost, and maturity (levels of integration and packaging) related to CMOS power amplifier design and deployment. The panelists will also debate the specific future of GaAs HBT and CMOS power amplifiers for handset applications. Manfred Schindler, RF Micro Devices Boston Design Center Lamberto Raffaelli, LNX Corporation Gabriele Marzocchi, Multiservices Madhukar Pitke, AXES Technologies Sponsors: MTT-19, Microwave Technology Business Issues IMS 2005 Outsourcing was one of several subjects covered in the IMS 2004 Panel Session, “There’s no Business Like Microwave Business!” (PWA), but this subject dominated the discussion. The demonstrated level of interest stimulated organizing a follow-up panel session focused on the impact of outsourcing on the microwave industry worldwide. Panelists from the USA, Europe and Asia will address the subject from their different viewpoints. PTUC: RF/MICROWAVE/MILLIMETER-WAVE APPLICATIONS OF METAMATERIALS Date & Time: Tuesday, June 14, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM PTUA: 3G HANDSETS – TOO MUCH POWER IN YOUR HANDS? Date & Time: Tuesday, June 14, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Hyatt Regency, Regency A/B/C Organizer: Derek Shaeffer, Aspendos Communications Panel: Aarno Parssinen, Nokia Bill Krenik, Texas Instruments Kamal Sahota, Qualcomm Larry Larson, UCSD Bernd Adler, Infineon Kevin Traylor, Freescale Tirdad Sowlati, Skyworks Solutions Sponsors: Panel: RFIC Symposium Location: Hyatt Regency, Regency D/E RFIC Symposium IMS 2005 They’re hot — literally. Third-generation cellular handsets still have a huge power problem compared to their more mature 2G counterparts. Closing the power gap is a significant problem and the focus of much industry effort. And, the multi-mode transceiver issues aren’t getting any easier, now that we can expect to see any number of ‘alternative’ wireless interfaces popping up in cell phones in the future, many of which already have bandwidths far exceeding those of the current cellular standards. How will the power gap be closed in these advanced phones? What architectures can deliver the needed power reduction while solving the multi-mode problem? Will these be extensions of existing approaches, which have been highly optimized for 2G applications, or are we in for something entirely new? And, what technologies will be required to make this happen? Will we ever see the day when a single transceiver can handle these numerous standards? Location: Hyatt Regency, Beacon B Organizers: Barry E. Spielman, Washington University in St. Louis Wolfgang J.R. Hoefer, University of Victoria Sponsors: MTT-6, Microwave and Millimeter-wave Integrated Circuits MTT-13, Microwave Ferrites and Ferroelectrics MTT-15, Microwave Field Theory IMS 2005 Moderator: Christophe Caloz, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal Panel: Arthur Oliner, Polytechnic University Tatsuo Itoh, UCLA Sheldon Schultz, UCSD George Eleftheriades, University of Toronto Nader Engheta, University of Pennsylvania Richard Ziolkowski, University of Arizona This panel session will provide a forum to identify important applications of metamaterials that exploit left-handed (backward) wave propagation (or alternatively, doubly-negative materials or materials with negative-refractive index). Such applications might include, but are not limited to directional couplers, filters, and antennas. The panelists will be asked to provide their vision of the applications that this field is most likely to impact. [Continued on page 55] 45 TH1A-1: High Power GaN Oscillators Using Field-plated HEMT Structure H. Xu, C. Sanabria, S. Heikman, S. Keller, U.K. Mishra, R.A. York, University of California at Santa Barbara TH1B-1: A V-band Eight-way Combined Solid-state Power Amplifier with 12.8 W Output Power K. Ngo-Wah, J. Goel, Y. Chou, R. Grundbacher, R. Lai, G. Nassour, E. Divish, G. Schreyer, K. Whitney, A. Oki, Northrop Grumman Space Technology TH1C-1: DC-to-135 GHz SPST and 15-to-135 GHz SPDT Traveling Wave Switches Using FET-integrated CPW Line Structure Z. Tsai, M. Yeh, M. Lei, H. Chang, C. Lin, H. Wang, National Taiwan University TH1D-1: Verification of p-equivalent Circuitbased Microwave Noise Model on AIIIBV HBTs with Emphasis on HICUM J. Herricht, P. Sakalas, M. Schrõter, Y. Zimmermann, TU Dresden; P. Zampardi, Skyworks Solutions; F. Korndõrfer, IHP; A. Simukovic, Spi TH1B-2: A Highly Efficiency and Linear Integrated PA for Ka-/Q-bands A. Katz, The College of New Jersey; R. Gray, Linearizer Technology Inc.; J. Matsuoka, NEC Microwave Tube Ltd. TH1C-2: Low-loss Quasi-optical Filters with Thick Silicon Substrates for Sub-mm Wave Frequency Multipliers S. Biber, O. Guenther, L.P. Schmidt, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg; M. Bozzi, L. Perregrini, University of Pavia TH1D-2: A New Parameter Extraction Method for GaN-based HEMT Small Signal Model 8:30 AM TH1A-3: Reconfigurable MEMS-enabled LCtank for Multi-band CMOS Oscillator R. Gaddi, A. Gnudi, E. Franchi, D. Guermandi, P. Tortori, University of Bologna; B. Margesin, F. Giacomozzi, ITC-IRST TH1D-3: Delay-Extraction Based Sensitivity Analysis of Multiconductor Transmission Lines with Nonlinear Terminations N.M. Nakhla, M.S. Nakhla, R. Achar, Carleton University; A. Dounavis, University of Western Ontario TH1B-3: X-band, 17 W, Solid State Power Amplifier for Space Applications W.R. Boger, R.G. Honda, D.H. Burgess, C.R. Nuckolls, General Dynamics 8:40 AM 8:50 AM TH1D Linear Modeling of Active and Passive Structures Chair: B. Jackson Co-chair: A. Weisshaar LBCC 201B TH1A-2: Active-Inductor-based Low-power Broadband Harmonic VCO in SiGe Technology for Wideband and Multistandard Applications R. Mukhopadhyay, Y. Park, S. Yoon, C. Lee, J.D. Cressler, J. Laskar, Georgia Electronic Design Center; S. Nuttinck, Philips Res. Labs TH1C-3: Opto Controlled Substrate Losses in a Coplanar Waveguide on HR-Si G. Poesen, G. Koers, J. Stiens, R. Vounckx, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; G. Carchon, W. De Raedt, IMEC TH1A-4: A CMOS Voltage-controlled Oscillator Using High-Q On-chip Inductor Implemented in a Wafer-level Package S. Yoon, S. Pinel, J. Laskar, Georgia Electronic Design Center TH1C-4: Novel Microstrip Antenna Employing Stacked Rings on Multi-layer Ceramic Substrate for mm-wave Applications T. Seki, N. Honma, K. Nishikawa, K. Tsunekawa, NTT Corp. TH1D-4: Guaranteed Passive Coupledmicrostrip Interconnect Modeling Using Finite Element Method S. You, E.F. Kuester, University of Colorado TH1C-5: Surface Mounted Millimeter Waveguide Devices Based on Metallized Dielectric Foam or Plastic Materials D. Lohinetong, P. Minard, C. Nicolas, A. Louzir, Thomson R&D France; J. Thevenard, J. Coupez, C. Person, Bretagne TH1D-5: Analytic Approximations for Multilayer Substrate Coplanar-plate Capacitors S. Abadei, Chalmers University of Technology; S. Gevorgian, Ericsson AB TH1C-6: A 60 GHz Stripline BPF for LTCC System-in-package Applications Y. Lee, C. Park, Information and Communications University (ICU) TH1D-6: A Linear Time Implicit Congruence Sparsification Technique for BEM Capacitance Extraction R. Jiang, University of Wisconsin, Madison; C. Chen, National Taiwan University TH1B-4: 60 W Doherty Amplifiers Using High Gain 2-stage Hybrid Amplifier Modules E.J. Crescenzi, Jr., R.S. Pengelly, S.M. Wood, R.E. Buss, Cree Microwave Corp. 9:00 AM 9:10 AM TH1C Millimeter and Submillimeterwave Components for Emerging High Frequency Applications Chair: R. Emrick Co-chair: G. Brehm LBCC 103AB 8:00–9:40 AM TH1B High Power Amplifiers Chair: J. Komiak Co-chair: F. Sechi LBCC 102 TH1A-5: Low DC-power Ku-band RTD VCO based on an InP monolithic RTD/HBT technology S. Choi, Y. Jeong, K. Yang, KAIST TH1B-5: Linearity Optimization of a High Power Doherty Amplifier K. Cho, S.P. Stapleton, Simon Fraser University; I. Hwang, J. Kim, Kwangwoon University 9:20 AM 9:30 AM IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS TH1A Novel Technologies for Signal Generation Chair: T. Ruttan Co-chair: J. Papaplymerou LBCC 101 8:20 AM 8:10 AM 8:00 AM THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005 TH1A-6: A Self-sustained Electrical Soliton Oscillator D.S. Ricketts, X. Li, M. DePetro, D. Ham, Harvard University 46 TH1E-1: Invited: Progress in Phased-array Radar Applications U. Nickel, J. Ender, H. Wilden, R. Klemm, A. Brenner, T. Eibert, D. Nuessler, FGAN TH1G Advance Nonlinear and Active Device Measurements Chair: A. Ferrero Co-chair: J. Martens LBCC 204 TH1F-1: High-order Superconducting Filter with Group Delay Equalization J. Hong, E.P. McErlean, B. Karyamapudi, Heriot-Watt University TH1G-1: Mixer-based, Vector-corrected, Vector Signal/Network Analyzer Offering 300 kHz-20 GHz Bandwidth and Traceable Phase Response P.S. Blockley, Macquarie University; J.B. Scott, D.B. Gunyan, Agilent Technologies TH1E-2: Invited: Current Status of Airborne Active Phased Array (AESA) Radar Systems and Future Trends H. Hommel, H-P. Feldle; EADS Deutschland GmbH TH1F-3: A Novel Quasi Lumped-element Resonator Using A Left-handed Transmission Line Section H. Salehi, R.R. Mansour, University of Waterloo TH1G-2: An Improved Broadband Conversion Scheme for the Large Signal Network Analyzer W. Van Moer, Y. Rolain, Vrije Universiteit Brussel TH1E-3: Invited: Status of a UAV SAR Designed for Repeat Pass Interferometry for Deformation Measurements S. Hensley, K. Wheeler, G. Sadowy, T. Miller, Y. Lou, R. Muellerschoen, S. Madsen, P. Rosen, JPL; H. Zebker, Stanford Univ. TH1F-4: Compact Bandpass Filtes Using Defected Ground Structure (DGS) Coupled Reonators A.B. Abdel-Rahman, A.R. Ali, A.S. Omar, OvG Magdeburg University; S. Amari, Royal Military College of Canada TH1G-3: Phase Characterization of Two-tone Intermodulation Distortion C. Crespo-Cadenas, J. Reina-Tosina, M.J. Madero-Ayora, University of Seville, ESI TH1E-4: Invited: Naval Radar in a Littoral nvironment R. de Jongh; Thales Nederland TH1F-5: Compact Microstrip Lowpass Filterbased on Defected Ground Structure and Compensated Microstrip Line J. Li, J. Wang, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China; Q. Xue, J. Chen, City University of Hong Kong TH1G-4: Experimental Evaluation of an Active Envelope Load Pull Architecture for High Speed Device Characterization. T. Williams, J. Benedikt, P.J. Tasker, Cardiff University 9:20 AM 9:30 AM TH1E-5: Invited: Advanced Ground-based ESCAN Radars U. Fuchs, W. Sieprath; EADS Deutschland GmbH THURSDAY TH1F-6: A New Two-layer Bandpass Filter Using Stepped Impedance Hairpin Resonators for Wireless Applications A. Djaiz, T. Denidni, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique 9:10 AM 9:00 AM 8:50 AM 8:40 AM 8:30 AM 8:20 AM TH1F Superconducting and Innovative Planar Filters Chair: D. Swanson Co-chair: R. Mansour LBCC 203 TH1F-2: Tuning Fork Filter Design for Hand Scribe Tuning G. Tsuzuki, M.P. Hernandez, B.A. Willemsen, Superconductor Technologies 8:10 AM 8:00 AM TH1E Trends for Future Radar Systems with Electronically Scanned Arrays, Part 1 • Special Session Chair: H. van Bezouwen Co-chair: J. Horton LBCC 202 TH1G-5: Production Test Method for Evaluating the Effect of Narrow-band Interference on Data Errors in Ultra-wideband (UWB) Receivers S. Bhattacharya, R. Senguttuvan, A. Chatterjee, Georgia Institute of Technology TH1F-7: Design of Narrow Bandpass Filters for Millimeter-wave Applications up to 220 GHz G. Prigent, LEN7; E. Rius, LEST; K. Blary, H. Happy, S. Lepilliet, G. Dambrine, A. Cappy, IEMN 47 TH2D Neural Network and Space Mapping Technologies Chair: Q.J. Zhang Co-chair: K.C. Gupta LBCC 201B TH2A-1: Accurate Design of HBT VCOs with Flicker Noise Up-conversion Minimization, Using an Advanced Low-frequency Cyclostationary Noise Model. C. Gourdon, D. Baglieri, M. Camiade, UMS; J. Nallatamby, M. Prigent, J. Obregon, IRCOM TH2B-1: A Predistortion Linearization System for High Power Amplifiers with Low Frequency Envelope Memory Effects W. Woo, J.S. Kenney, Georgia Institute of Technology TH2C-1: A 77 GHz Monolithic IMPATT Transmitter in Standard CMOS Technology T. Al-Attar, A. Hassibi, T.H. Lee, Stanford University TH2D-1: Transient Electromagnetic Modeling Using Recurrent Neural Networks H. Sharma, Q.J. Zhang, Carleton University TH2B-2: Memory Effect Evaluation and Predistortion of Power Amplifiers P.J. Draxler, J. Deng, UCSD & QUALCOMM Inc.; D. Kimball, I. Langmore, P.M. Asbeck, Univ. of California TH2C-2: A 44 GHz High-linearity MMIC Medium Power Amplifier with a Low-loss Built-in Linearizer J. Tsai, H. Chang, P. Wu, T. Huang, H. Wang, National Taiwan University TH2D-2: A Neural Network Method for the Analysis of Multilayered Shielded Microwave Circuits. J. Pascual-Garcia, F.D. Quesada-Pereira, D. Caete-Rebenaque, J.L. Gomez-Tornero, A. Alvarez-Melcon, Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena TH2B-3: EDGE Transmitter with Commercial GSM Power Amplifier Using Polar Modulation with Memory Predistortion G.J. Seegerer, G. Ulbricht, Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits TH2C-3: Metamorphic 94 GHz Power Amplifier MMICs A. Tessmann, A. Leuther, H. Massler, M. Kuri, C. Schwoerer, M. Schlechtweg, G. Weimann, Fraunhofer Institute IAF TH2D-3: Tuning of Microwave Filters by Extracting Human Experience Using Fuzzy Logic V. Miraftab, R. Mansour, University of Waterloo TH2A-2: A Fully Integrated 70 GHz SiGe Low Phase Noise Push-push Oscillator R. Wanner, G. Olbrich, P. Russer, Technische Universitõút Menchen; H. Schõúfer, R. Lachner, Infineon Technologies 10:40 AM 10:50 AM 11:00 AM TH2A-3: Low Phase Noise X-band Push-push Oscillator with Frequency Divider M. Schott, F. Lenk, C. Meliani, W. Heinrich, Ferdinand-Braun-Institut fer Hechstfrequenztechnik (FBH) TH2A-4: Design of Push-push Oscillators for Reducing 1/f Noise Upconversion J. Choi, A. Mortazawi, University of Michigan TH2A-5: A Low Power, Low Phase Noise Local Oscillator for Chip-scale Atomic Clocks A.S. Brannon, J. Breitbarth, Z. Popovic, University of Colorado TH2C-4: Medium Power Amplifiers Covering 90-130 GHz for the ALMA Telescope Local Oscillators L.A. Samoska, D. Pukala, A. Peralta, JPL, Cal. Tech.; E. Bryerton, M. Morgan, D. Thacker, K. Saini, T. Boyd, Nat’l Radio Astr Obs; M. Hu, A. Schmitz, HRL Labs LLC TH2B-4: Closed-loop Digital Pre-distortion with Memory Effects Using Genetic Algorithms R. Sperlich, J.S. Kenney, Georgia Institute of Technology; J.A. Sills, KhiMetrics Inc. 11:10 AM 11:40 AM 10:10–11:50 AM TH2C Millimeter-wave Monolithic Transceiver Components Chair: D. Choudhury Co-chair: P. Saunier LBCC 103AB TH2A-6: Low Power and Low Phase Noise 5.7 GHz LC VCO in OOK Transmitter for Neurosensory Application P. Upadhyaya, M. Rajashekhraiah, D. Heo, D.M. Rector, Washington State University; Y.E. Chen, National Taiwan University TH2D-4: Enhanced Surrogate Models for Statistical Design Exploiting Space Mapping Technology S. Koziel, J.W. Bandler, A.S. Mohamed, McMaster University; K. Madsen, Technical University of Denmark TH2B-5: Positive Feedback Pilot Generation and Detection for Use in Feedforward Loop Control R.N. Braithwaite, Powerwave Technologies TH2C-5: A mm-wave Diode-MMIC Chipset for Local Osc. Generation in the ALMA Telescope M. Morgan, E. Bryerton, T. Boyd, D. Thacker, K. Saini, National Radio Astronomy Observatory; P. Cesarano, L-3 Communications; S. Weinreb, California Institute of Technology TH2D-5: New Multimodel Aggressive Space Mapping Technique for the Efficient Design of Complex Microwave Circuits H. Esteban, V. Boria, C. Bachiller, Universidad Politecnica de Valencia; J. Morro, A. Coves, Universidad Miguel Hernandez de Elche 11:30 AM 11:20 AM IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS TH2B Advances in High Power Amplifier Linearization Chair: J. Staudinger Co-chair: A. Katz LBCC 102 10:30 AM 10:20 AM 10:10 AM THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005 TH2A New Approaches for Low Noise Oscillators Chair: D. Elad Co-chair: P. Khanna LBCC 101 TH2B-6: The 3rd and 5th Order Base-band Component Injection for Linearization of Power Amplifier in Cellular Phone N. Mizusawa, S. Kusunoki, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Japan Inc. TH2C-6: InP/InGaAs-DHBT Distributed Amplifier MMICs Exceeding 80 GHz Bandwidth K. Schneider, R. Driad, R.E. Makon, A. Tessmann, R. Aidam, R. Quay, M. Schlechtweg, G. Weimann, Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid-State Physics (IAF) 48 TH2E-1: Invited: Status and Trends for Space-borne Phased Array Radar M. Ludwig, C. Buck, M. Suess, F. Coromina; ESA/ESTEC TH2G-2: A New Multiport Measurementmethod Using a Two-port Network Analyzer F. Lenk, R. Doerner, Ferdinand-BraunInstitut (FBH) TH2F-3: Design and Measurement of a Smart Tunable Periodic Material L. Mercier, M. Thõvenot, A. Crunteanu, B. Jecko, P. Blondy, IRCOM; J. Orlianges, C. Champeaux, A. Catherinot, SPCTS TH2G-3: Statistical Analysis of Random Errors from Calibration Standards X. Chen, BreconRidge Manufacturing Solutions TH2F-4: Propagation Characteristics of Wide Synthetic Quasi-TEM Transmission Line S. Wang, C.K. Tzuang, National Taiwan University; H.S. Wu, National Chiao Tung University TH2G-4: New Methods for the Characterization of Thin Dielectric Samples at Low Frequencies D. Koether, J. Berben, A. Bettray, IMST GmbH TH2E-4: Invited: Design Considerations for Space-based Radar Phased Arrays J.S.Herd, A.J. Fenn; MIT Lincoln Lab TH2G-5: A Novel MEMS Probe Array for the Biological Measurement J. Kim, C. Baek, J. Cho, Y. Kwon, Y. Kim, Seoul National University; D. Oh, C. Cheon, University of Seoul TH2F-5: Experimentally Investigating Slowwave Transmission Lines and Filters Based on Conductor-backed CPW Periodic Cells K. Ma, J. Ma, M. Do, K. Yeo, Nanyang Technological University TH2G-6: Measurement of Electrotextiles for High Frequency Applications Y. Ouyang, W.J. Chappell, Purdue University 49 THURSDAY 10:40 AM TH2F-2: A Novel Feeding Technique for Antipodal Linearly Tapered Slot Array Antenna H. ZhangCheng, H. Wei, C. JixIn, C. XiaoPing, Southeast University; W. Ke, Montreal, Montreal, Canada TH2E-3: Invited: Digital Beam Forming Synthetic Aperture Radar C. Heer, P.F. Shutie; EADS Astrium 10:50 AM 11:00 AM TH2G-1: A 220 GHz Wafer Probe Tip with Reduced Stray Fields R.L. Campbell, M. Andrews, L. Bui, Cascade Microtech Inc. 11:40 AM 11:30 AM TH2G Innovations in Microwave Measurement Chair: L. Hayden Co-chair: R. Henderson LBCC 204 TH2F-1: Reconfigurable MEMS Transmission Lines with Independent ZOand beta-tuning B. Lakshminaryanan, T. Weller, University of South Florida 11:20 AM 11:10 AM TH2F Synthetic Transmission Lines and Their Applications Chair: M.S. Gupta Co-chair: P. Russer LBCC 203 TH2E-2: Invited: System Concepts and Technologies for High Orbit SAR A. Moussessian, W. Edelstein, C. Chen, S. Madsen; Jet Propulsion Lab 10:30 AM 10:20 AM 10:10 AM TH2E Trends for Future Radar Systems with Electronically Scanned Arrays, Part 2 • Special Session Chair: J. Horton Co-chair: A. Moussessian LBCC 202 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS TH3C Metamaterial Waveguides Chair: A.A. Oliner Co-chair: N. Engheta LBCC 103AB 1:20–3:00 PM TH3B Advanced Radar Systems Chair: G. Heiter Co-chair: K. Breuer LBCC 102 TH3D Efficient CAD for Multilayer Circuits and Large Interconnect Networks Chair: A. Sharma Co-chair: N. Buris LBCC 201B TH3A-1: Triply Wideband VCO with Triple Tuned Circuits in C-/Ku-band M. Tsuru, K. Kawakami, K. Tajima, K. Miyamoto, M. Nakane, M. Miyazaki, T. Takagi, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. TH3B-1: An Active Membrane Phased Array Radar A. Moussessian, L. Del Castillo, J. Huang, G. Sadowy, J. P. Hoffman, P. Smith, T. Hatake, C.G. Derksen, B.C. Lopez, E. Caro, Jet Propulsion Lab TH3C-1: Compact Leaky-wave Components Using Metamaterials A. Aloe, N. Engheta, University of Pennsylvania; F. Bilotti, L. Vegni, University of Roma Tre TH3D-1: Efficient Planar Electromagnetic Analysis by Impedance Matrix Interpolation M. Mongiardo, R. Sorrentino, C. Tomassoni, Univ. of Perugia TH3A-2: A 60 GHz-band Subharmonically Injection Locked VCO MMIC Operating over Wide Temperature Range S. Kishimoto, K. Maruhashi, M. Ito, T. Morimoto, Y. Hamada, K. Ohata, NEC Corp. TH3B-2: A Multilayer Front-end for an Imaging Radar Sensor M. Leib, W. Mayer, H. Bilzer, W. Menzel, University of Ulm TH3C-2: Experimental Verification of Surface Waves of Metamaterials A. Sanada, I. Matsuda, Yamaguchi University TH3D-2: Enhanced PEEC Modeling for Embedded RF Passives of Irregular Shapes M. Hu, J. Wang, K. Wu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong TH3C-3: New Interpretation of Wave Propagation in High Impedance Surfaces R. Ramprasad, University of Connecticut; M. Petras, Freescale Semiconductor TH3D-3: Accelerated Optical Topography Inspection Using Parameterized Model Order Reduction J. Lee, D. Vasilyev, A. Vithayathil, L. Daniel, J. White, Massachusetts Institute of Technology TH3C-4: Evanescent Rectangular Waveguide with Corrugated Walls: A Composite Right/Left-handed Metaguide I.A. Eshrah, A.A. Kishk, A.B. Yakovlev, A.W. Glisson, University of Mississippi TH3D-4: Efficient Generation of Multiparameter Closed-form Expressions for High Speed Transmission Line Networks A. Jerome, N. Rodrigues, P. Gunupudi, M. Nakhla, Carleton University; R. Khazaka, McGill University 1:50 PM 1:40 PM 1:30 PM 1:20 PM THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005 TH3A Advances in Signal Generation Techniques Chair: H.J. Kuno Co-chair: S. Wetenkamp LBCC 101 2:00 PM TH3B-3: Retrodirective Noise-correlating Radar at X-Band: First Demonstration of Small Target Detection E.B. Brown, Physical Domains; E.R. Brown, University of California, Santa Barbara 2:50 PM 2:40 PM 2:20 PM 2:20 PM 2:10 PM TH3C-5: Left Handed Behavior of Transmission Lines Based on SRR Filled Waveguides J. Carbonell, L.J. Roglõä, V.E. Boria, Universidad Politecnica de Valencia TH3A-3: Frequency Sweep Linearization for FMCW Sensors with High Measurement Rate M. Pichler, Center of Mechatronics GmbH; A. Stelzer, Johannes Kepler Univ.; P. Gulden, C. Seisenberger, Siemens AG, M. Vossiek, Tech. Univ. Clausthal TH3B-4: Single Antenna Microwave Nulling Using Time-Reversal Techniques A.G. Cepni, D.D. Stancil, Carnegie Mellon University TH3C-6: Propagation of Resonance Cones in Truncated Hyperbolic Transmission-Line Grids Over Ground O.F. Siddiqui, K.G. Balmain, G.V. Eleftheriades, University of Toronto TH3D-5: Passive Model Order Reduction for Interconnect Networks with Large Number of Ports M. Ma, R. Khazaka, McGill University TH3B-5: Compensation of the Doppler Shift for a Local Position Measurement System by Using a Kalman Filter K. Pourvoyeur, Linz Center of Mechatronics GmbH; A. Stelzer, Johannes Kepler University Linz; A. Fischer, Abatec Electronic AG TH3C-7: Waves in Anisotropic Metamaterials Comprised of Finite L-C Meshes E.P. Brennan, A. Gardiner, A. Schuchinsky, V. Fusco, Queen’s University Belfast TH3D-6: An Adjoint-based Approach to Computing the Time-domain Sensitivity of Systems Described by Reduced-order Models T. Ahmed, E. Gad, M. Yagoub, Univ. of Ottawa TH3A-4: Design and Analysis of VCO with Tunable Ring Filter H. Ishida, National Institute of Information; K. Araki, Tokyo Institute of Technology TH3A-5: 38-43 GHz Quadrature VCO on 90 nm VLSI CMOS with Feedback Frequency Tuning F. Ellinger, H. Jaeckel, ETH Zurich TH3A-6: A 12 GHz GaInP/GaAs HBT VCO Based on Push-push Output Extraction from Capacitive Common-node J. Kim, N. Kim, H. Shin, Kwangwoon University; S. Jeon, S. Moon, Knowledge*On Inc. 50 TH3F Novel Transmission Lines and Structures Chair: G.E. Ponchak Co-chair: C-K.C. Tzuang LBCC 203 TH3G Circuits and Techniques for Multi-Gigabit/sec Transmission Chair: S. Marsh Co-chair: H. Boss LBCC 204 TH3E-1: Tissue Sensing Adaptive Radar for Breast Cancer Detection: Preliminary Experimental Results J.M. Sill, E.C. Fear, University of Calgary TH3F-1: On the mm-wave Characteristics and Model of On-chip Interconnect Transmission Lines Up to 110 GHz M.T. Yang, P.C. Ho, T.J. Yeh, Y.J. Wang, D. Kuo, C.W. Kuo, S.C. Yang, S. Liu, TSMC; A. Mangan, S. Voinigescu, University of Toronto TH3G-1: Estimating Data-dependent Jitter of a General LTI System from Step Response B. Analui, J. Buckwalter, A. Hajimiri, California Institute of Technology TH3E-2: Design and Modeling of a Specific Microwave Applicator for Treatment of Snoring P. Cresson, C. Ricard, N. Bernardin, L. Dubois, J.P. Pribetich, Universite des Sciences et Technologies de Lille TH3F-2: Q Enhancement with Crossconnected Coplanar Waveguides in Thick Dual Damascene Cu W.D. van Noort, C. Detcheverry, G. Verheijden, P. Bancken, R. Daamen, Philips Research Leuven; L. Tiemeijer, R. Havens, Philips Research Eindhoven TH3G-2: A Fully Integrated 0.18 µm CMOS Equalizer with an Active Inductance Peaking Delay Line for 10 Gbps Data Throughput over 500 m Multimode Fiber M. Maeng, Y. Hur, S. Chandramouli, H. Kim, C. Chun, J. Laskar, Georgia Electronic Design Center; F. Bien, E. Gebara, Quellan Inc. TH3E-3: Advances in Microwave Hyperthermia of Large Superficial Tumors P.F. Maccarini, University of California TH3F-3: High Quality Microstrip Termination for MMIC and Millimeter-wave Applications R.R. Monje, V.V. Vassilev, A. Pavolotsky , V. Belitsky, Chalmers University of Technology TH3G-3: Performance Analysis of MultiGigahertz Parallel Bus with Transmit Preemphasis Equalization W.T. Beyene, N. Cheng, J. Feng, H. Shi, D. Oh, C. Yuan, Rambus Inc. TH3F-4: Increasing the Speed of Microstrip Line-type PDLC Devices Y. Utsumi, T. Kamei, K. Saito, H. Moritake, National Defense Academy TH3G-4: EAM DFF-driver Optimization for 40 Gb/s Transmitter A. Konczykowska, F. Jorge, C. Kazmierski, F. Blache, J. Godin, Alcatel-Thales III-V Labs TH3F-5: Influence of Design Liquid Crystalbased Devices on the Agility Capability N. Martin, P. Laurent, C. Person, P. Gelin, F. Hiret, LEST UMR TH3G-5: A 40 Gbps GaAs-HBT Distributed Amplifier with an Over-fT Cut-off Frequency: Analytical and Experimental Study C. Meliani, M. Rudolph, W. Heinrich, FBH (Ferdinand-Braun-Institut fõ-r Hoechstfrequenztechnik) TH3E-4: Electromagnetic Interactions between Biological Tissues and Implantable Biotelemetry Systems J. Kim, Y. Rahmat-Samii, University of California, Los Angeles 2:50 PM 2:40 PM TH3E-5: Thermal Steady State in Human Head under Continuous EM Exposure W. Kim, J. Yook, Yonsei University TH3E-6: Permittivity Measurement for Biological Application Using Micromachined Probe J. Kim, J. Cho, Y. Kwon, Y. Kim, Seoul National University; D. Oh, C. Cheon, University of Seoul; J. Park, LG Electrionics TH3E-7: Microwave Sterilization by the Catalyst Coated with Metal Thin Film H. Wang, Y. Miyakawa, Y. Kanno, University of Yamanashi THURSDAY 2:30 PM 2:20 PM 2:10 PM 2:00 PM 1:50 PM 1:40 PM 1:30 PM 1:20 PM TH3E Biological Effects and Medical Applications Chair: A. Omar Co-chair: A. Vander Vorst LBCC 202 TH3G-6: Design of a Fully HBT 40 GS/s Sampling Circuit for Very Large Bandwidth Non-repetitive Signal Analysis H. El Aabbaoui, N. Rolland, A. Benlarbi-Delai, P. Rolland, IEMN Univ. of Lille; N. Fel, V. Allouche, CEA DAM; B. Riondet, Greenfield Tech. 51 IEEE MTT-S IMS TECHNICAL SESSIONS TH4E Advances in HF, VHF and UHF Technology Chair: R. Caverly Co-chair: M. Eron LBCC 202 3:30–5:10 PM TH4C High-frequency Propagation and Effects Chair: J. Zehentner Co-chair: D. Jackson LBCC 103AB TH4F Left Handed Transmission Lines and Applications Chair: K. Wu Co-chair: W. Gwarek LBCC 203 TH4B-1: Wireless Uncompressed-HDTVSignal Transmission System Utilizing Compact 60 GHz Band Transmitter and Receiver K. Maruhashi, S. Kishimoto, M. Ito, K. Ohata, Y. Hamada, T. Morimoto, H. Shimawaki, NEC Corp. TH4C-1: High-frequency Excitation of a Microstrip Line by a Probe R. Rodrõguez-Berral, F. Mesa, Universidad de Sevilla; D.R. Jackson, University of Houston TH4E-1: Improved LINC Power Transmission Using a Quadrature Outphasing Technique G.M. Hegazi, T.T. Chu, R.A. Groshong, Rockwell Collins; M.T. Durkin, NavAir TH4F-1: A New Realization of Left-handed Transmission Lines Employing A Coaxial Waveguide Structure H. Salehi, R.R. Mansour, University of Waterloo TH4B-2: Ultra-wideband (UWB) RF Frontend Module Implementation for Multi-band OFDM System Y. Park, R. Mukhopadhyay, K. Lim, C. Lee, J. Laskar, Georgia Electronic Design Center, School of ECE; A. Wakejima, Photonic and Wireless Devices Research Labs TH4C-2: Transmission Characteristics of the First Higher Mode in a Strip Line at Millimeter-wavelength F. Kuroki, K. Miyamoto, S. Nishida (retired), Kure Nat’l College of Technology TH4E-2: A 2.7 kW, 29 MHz Class-E/Fodd Amplifier with a Distributed Active Transformer S. Jeon, D.B. Rutledge, California Institute of Technology TH4F-2: Fourier Synthesizer Using Lefthanded Transmission Lines H. Kim, A.B. Kozyrev, S. Ho, D.W. van der Weide, University of Wisconsin - Madison 3:50 PM 3:40 PM 3:30 PM THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005 TH4B Wideband Communications Systems Chair: R. Knoechel Co-chair: G. Lyons LBCC 102 TH4B-3: Novel Circular Polarized Antenna Array Substrates for 60 GHz Band H. Uchimura, N. Shino, K. Miyazato, Kyocera Corp. R&D Center TH4C-4: Flat Waveguide with a Longitudinal Slot J. Zehentner, J. Mrkvica, J. Machac, Czech Technical University in Prague TH4E-3: A Novel Surface-mount RF Delay Filter for Feedforward LPAs W.H. Cantrell, D.R. Anderson, W.R. Meszko, Motorola TH4F-3: A Broadband Microstrip-to-CPS Transition Using Composite Right-/Lefthanded Transmission Lines with an Antenna Application C. Lee, K.M. Leong, T. Itoh, University of California, Los Angeles TH4B-4: Development of a Twin-feedhorn for Dual Linear DBS Reflector Antennas S. Lee, L. Schmieder, A.E. Fathy, S.M. ElGhazaly, University of Tennessee; G. Rodeffer, B. Zihlman, Winegard Co. TH4C-5: Analysis of Printed Periodic Structures on a Grounded Substrate: A New Brillouin Dispersion Diagram P. Baccarelli, S. Paulotto, La Sapienza University of Rome; D.R. Jackson, University of Houston; A.A. Oliner, Polytechnic University TH4E-4: A Mammalian Cochlea-based RF Channelizing Filter C.J. Galbraith, G.M. Rebeiz, The University of Michigan; R.D. White, K. Grosh, The University of Michigan TH4F-4: Equivalent Circuit Modeling of Symmetric Composite Right-/Left-handed Coplanar Waveguides S. Mao, M. Wu, National Taipei University of Technology 5:00 PM 4:50 PM 4:40 PM 4:30 PM 4:20 PM 4:10 PM 4:00 PM TH4C-3: Simulation of Subterahertz Attenuation in Coplanar Waveguides J. Zhang, T.Y. Hsiang, University of Rochester TH4B-5: Broadband/Multiband Conformal Circular Beam-steering Array J.J. Wang, D.J. Triplett, C.J. Stevens, Wang Electro-Opto Corp. TH4B-6: Phase-synchronization in UWB Receivers with Sampling Phase Detectors A. Reisenzahn, T. Buchegger, G. Kaineder, C.G. Diskus, Johannes Keppler University TH4C-6: Modeling of Three-dimensional Electromagnetic Band-gap Structures N. Bottari, F. Frezza, L. Pajewski, G. Schettini, Rome, Italy, TH4F-5: Left-handed Coplanar Waveguide J. Machac, M. Hudlicka, J. Zehentner, Czech Technical University; N. Spiliotis, A. Omar, University of Magdeburg TH4B-7: Impact of Group Delay in RF BPF on Impulse Radio Systems S. Myoung, J. Yook, Yonsei Univ. 52 THURSDAY SPECIAL SESSIONS TH1E: TRENDS FOR FUTURE RADAR SYSTEMS ELECTRONICALLY SCANNED ARRAYS, PART I Date & Time: Thursday, June 16, 8:00 to 9:40 AM TH2E: TRENDS FOR FUTURE RADAR SYSTEMS ELECTRONICALLY SCANNED ARRAYS, PART II Date & Time: Thursday, June 16, 10:10 to 11:50 AM WITH WITH Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202 Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202 Chair: Hans van Bezouwen, EADS, Germany Chair: John Horton, J.B. Horton Group, USA Co-Chair: John Horton, J.B. Horton Group, USA Co-Chair: Alina Moussessian, Jet Propulsion Laboratory USA For IMS2005, the session is expanded into two sessions to include additional papers on space-based applications of electronically scanned phased array radars. This session, Part I, includes a general overview paper regarding new technologies for radar with electronically scanned arrays, as well as focused papers on airborne, naval and ground-based applications. Each application area is analyzed to define technology advancements needed to meet future system requirements, e.g., space, power, efficiency and cost. This session, Part II, is focused on technology advancements needed in space-based radars using electronically scanned arrays. Each application area is analyzed to define technology advancements needed to meet future system requirements, i.e., space, weight, power consumption, efficiency and cost. The session includes two papers from the European Radar Conference (EuRAD), held in Amsterdam in October 2004. Two papers are added to cover development work in the USA on similar application areas. 53 THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005 • THIF INTERACTIVE FORUM • 1:30–4:30 PM THURSDAY CHAIR: H.J. DE LOS SANTOS, NANOMEMS RESEARCH • CO-CHAIR: J. GOEL, RAYTHEON • LBCC GRAND BALLROOM THPA-1: Estimation of In-band Distortion in Digital Communication System K.G. Gard, M.B. Steer, North Carolina State University; K.M. Gharaibeh, Yarmouk University THPA-2: Nonlinear Behavioral Modeling of Power Amplifiers Using Radial-Basis Function Neural Networks M. Isaksson, D. Rõnnow, University of Gõúvle; D. Wisell, Ericsson AB THPA-3: Extending Static Models by Using Time Series to Identify the Dynamical Behavior J. Wood, J. Horn, D. Root, Agilent Technologies Inc. THPA-4: Broadband, Multi-harmonic Frequency Domain Behavioral Models from Automated Large-signal Vectorial Network Measurements J. Verspecht, Jan Verspecht bvba; D.E. Root, J. Wood, A. Cognata, Agilent Technologies THPA-5: Behavioral Modeling of Power Amplifiers Using Fully Recurrent Neural Networks D. Luongvinh, Y. Kwon, Seoul National University THPA-6: Behavior Modeling Procedure of Wideband RF Transmitters Exhibiting Memory Effects T. Liu, S. Boumaiza, M. Helaoui, H. Ben Nasr, F.M. Ghannouchi, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal THPA-7: Macro-Modeling of Non-linear Pre-emphasis Differential Driver Circuits B.M. Mutnury, M. Swaminathan, Georgia Institute of Technology; M. Cases, N. Pham, D. de Araujo, E. Matoglu, IBM THPB-1: A 60 GHz MMIC Dual-quadrature Mixer in pHEMT Technology for Ultra Wideband IF Signals and High LO to RF Isolation S. Gunnarsson, Microwave Electronics Lab; H. Zirath, Microwave Electronics Lab THPB-2: Double-balanced, Hybrid Mixer with Multi-decade Bandwidth D.B. Gunyan, Agilent Technologies THPB-3: Digital Predistortion of Frequency Multiplier for Dual band Wireless LAN Transmitter J. Choi, S. Kang, K. Koo, University of Incheon THPB-4: Compact Tunable Periodically LC Loaded Microstrip Line for Phase Shifting Applications C. Damm, M. Schõáler, M. Oertel, R. Jakoby, Technische Universitõút Darmstadt THPB-5: MMIC HEMT Switch for Switch Matrix of Satellite Communication System K. Ryu, Hanbat National University; D. Shin, I. Yom, J. Park, S. Lee, ETRI; M. Lee, Univ. of Seoul THPB-6: Development of a Low Cost 5 Bit Ku-band Phase Shifter Using HJ-FET Packaged Devices for DBS Mobile Reception S. Yang, A.E. Fathy, University of Tennessee THPB-7: A Miniaturized Wideband 4x4 Switch Matrix IC Using Four InP-HEMT SP4T Switches H. Kamitsuna, Y. Yamane, M. Tokumitsu, H. Sugahara, M. Muraguchi, NTT Photonics Labs., NTT Corp. THPB-8: A Subharmonic Self-oscillating Mixer Using Substrate Integrated Waveguide Cavity for Millimeter-wave Application J. Xu, K. Wu, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal THPC-1: Class-F Power Amplifier Using a Multi-frequency Composite Right-/Left-handed Transmission Line Harmonic Tuner A. Dupuy, K.M. Leong, T. Itoh, University of California, Los Angeles THPC-2: Prediction of Error Vector Magnitude Using AM/AM, AM/PM Distortion of RF Power Amplifier for High Order Modulation OFDM System J. Kim, J. Jung, K. Lee, ETRI, Daejeon; C. Park, ICU THPC-3: Comparison of X-band MESFET and HBT Class-E Power Amplifiers for EER Transmitters S. Pajic, N. Wang, Z. Popovic, University of Colorado at Boulder THPC-4: First Demonstration of 4H-SiC RF Bipolar Junction Transistors on a Semi-insulating Substrate with fT/fMAX of 7/5.2 GHz F. Zhao, I. Perez-Wurfl, C. Huang, J. Torvik, B. Van Zeghbroeck, PowerSicel Inc., Univ. of Colorado THPC-5: An X-band Hybrid MIC Feedforward Amplifier for Low Residual Noise Operation V. Sokolov, J.N. Kruchowski, M.E. Vickberg, B. Buhrow, S. Schuster, J. Bublitz, B.K. Gilbert, E.S. Daniel, Mayo Clinic THPC-6: Digitally Controlled RF Predistortion with Digital Predictor for Feedforward Delay Compensation I. Teikari, J. Vankka, K. Halonen, Helsinki University of Technology THPC-7: Nonlinear System Performance of Shared Amplifiers based on 3-way Microstrip Phase Combiners T. Baras, TU Hamburg-Harburg; C. Metz, Bell Labs - Lucent Technologies THPC-8: High Pass Output Matching Technique with Enhanced Third Harmonic Rejection for CDMA Power Amplifiers Y. Yang, Skyworks Solutions Inc. THPD-1: Digital Memory-based Predistortion S.M. McBeath, D.T. Pinckley, Motorola Labs THPD-2: Efficiency Enhancement Method for High-power Amplifiers Using a Dynamic Load Adaptation Technique H. Jeong, H. Lee, I. Chang, Sogang University; C. Kim, Sewon Teletech Inc. THPD-3: Linearity Improvement for Power MESFET Devices Using Source Inductive Feedback and Input Impedance Mismatch C. Meng, National Chiao Tung University; W. Wang, National Chung-Hsin University THPE-1: Layout Effects on Design Optimization of CMOS LNA and Mixer W. Wu, M. Chan, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong THPE-2: A Miniature Dual-band Low-noise Amplifier Module for IEEE 802.11b/g/a WLAN Applications Y.H. Chow, T.C. Chong, Z. Hasan-Abrar, C.C. Loh, T.L. Tan, E.C. Chew, Agilent Technologies THPE-3: Prototype Development of a Geostationary Synthetic Thinned Aperture Radiometer (GeoSTAR) P. Kangaslahti, A. Tanner, W. Wilson, B. Lambrigtsen, S. Dinardo, Jet Propulsion Lab THPF-1: Complex Permittivity Measurements of Dielectrics and Semiconductors at Millimeterwaves with High Power Sources M.N. Afsar, K.A. Korolev, L. Subramanian, I.I. Tkachov, Tufts University THPF-2: LTCC Reduced-size Bandpass Filters Based on Capacitively Loaded Cavities for Qband Application P. Ferrand, D. Baillargeat, S. Verdeyme, IRCOM; J. Puech, CNES (French Space Agency); M. Lahti, T. Jaakola, VTT THPF-3: A 60 GHz Band Dielectric Waveguide Filter Made of Crystalline Quartz K. Ito, K. Sano, TOKO Inc. THPF-4: A Compact-sized NRD Guide Single Mixer Using Band-pass Filters at 60 GHz F. Kuroki, M. Kimura, Y. Murata, Kure Nat’l. College of Technology; T. Yoneyama, Tohoku Inst. of Tech. THPF-5: 77 GHz Band Antenna Array Substrate for Short Range Car Radar N. Shino, H. Uchimura, K. Miyazato, Kyocera Corp. R&D Center THPF-6: Fully Integrated Distributed Amplifier Design on InP HBT Technology for Optoelectronics Application L. Robin, M. Regis, H. Cam, ACCO; A. Perennec, D. Herve, D. Le Berre, A. Peden, Univ. de Bretagne Occidentale; H. Yano, S. Furudate, S. Yaegassi, Sumitomo Elec. Ind. THPF-7: Terahertz Time-domain Spectroscopy of Crushed Wheat Grain H. Chua, A.D. Haigh, A.A. Gibson, Univ of Manchester; J. Obradovic, P.C. Upadhya, O. Hirch, D. Crawley, L.F. Gladden, Univ of Cambridge; E.H. Linfield, Univ. of Leeds THPF-8: Millimeter-wave Microstrip-to-waveguide Transition Operating over Broad Frequency Bandwidth Y. Deguchi, K. Sakakibara, N. Kikuma, H. Hirayama, Nagoya Institute of Technology THPF-9: A 77 GHz Automotive Radar MMIC Chip Set Fabricated by a 0.15 µm MHEMT Tech. D. Kang, J. Hong, J. Shim, J. Lee, H. Yoon, K. Lee, ETRI THPF-10: Integration of Silicon Etched Waveguides with MCM-D for V- and W-band I. Ocket, B. Nauwelaers, KU Leuven; G.J. Carchon, A. Jourdain, W. De Raedt, IMEC THPG-1: Crosstalk Improved Three Channel Receiver Module for 10 Gb/s Parallel Optical Interconnect Application S. Park, C. Park, Information and Communications University THPG-2: Electromagnetic Simulation of Photonic Mixing in Ultra-Wideband TWPDs I. Jaeger, D. Pasalic, R. Vahldieck, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology THPG-3: Implementation of the Phased-lock Loop Clock Recovery Module for 40 Gb/s Optical Receivers C. Park, D. Woo, T. Kim, K.W. Kim, Kyungpook National University; S. Lim, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute THPG-4: Suppression of Optical Beat Interference in WDM-SCMA Networks Using Modulated Optical Combs H. Jung, Y. Won, S. Han, Yonsei University THPH-1: Determination of Intermodulation Distortion in a MEMS Microswitch J. Johnson, G.G. Adams, N.E. McGruer, Northeastern University THPH-2: Widely Tunable High-Q Evanescent-mode Resonators Using Flexible Polymer Substrates S. Hajela, X. Gong, W.J. Chappell, Purdue University THPH-3: Skin Effect Aggregated Heating in RF MEMS Suspended Structures L.L. Chow, Z. Wang, B.D. Jensen, K. Saitou, K. Kurabayashi, University of Michigan; J.L. Volakis, Ohio State University THPH-4: Fabrication and Measurements Using Ultra-tall Near-field Coaxial Tips Y. Wang, C.A. Paulson, G. Ning, D.W. van der Weide, University of Wisconsin-Madison THPI-1: Conductor Roughness Reduced Low-loss Coplanar Waveguides on Low Resistivity Silicon by Employing Magnetorheological Finishing S. Lee, J. Yook, S. Park, J. Lee, Y. Kim, S. Lee, Yonsei University THPI-2: Crosstalk Attenuation with Ground Plane Structures in Three-dimensionally Integrated Mixed Signal Systems S.K. Kim, C.C. Liu, S. Tiwari, Cornell University; L. Xue, Advanced Micro Devices THPI-3: Ultrawideband Characterisation of Photoimageable Thick Film Materials for Microwave and Millimeter-wave Design K. Samanta, I.D. Robertson, University of Leeds; D. Stephens, University of Surrey THPI-4: Is Hermitic Encapsulation of GaAs MMIC Still Required for Space Applications? P. Monfraix, J. Monsarrat, J. Muraro, C. Drevon, J. Cazaux, Alcatel Space; S. Dareys, M. Billot, CNES THPI-5: Wideband Organic Solutions for MMIC Packaging T. Barbier, D. Caban-Chastas, V. Rananjason, P. Kertesz, Thales Airborne Systems THPJ-1: Improvement of Gain Compression in Microwave Lumped and Transversal Bandpass Filters W.W. Choi, K.W. Tam, R.P. Martins, University of Macau THPJ-2: Microstrip Dual-mode Bandpass Filter Design with Simultaneous Size Reduction and Spurious Response Suppression S. Fok, P. Cheong, K. Tam, University of Macau; R.P. Martins, Instituto Superior Tecnico THPJ-3: New Coupled Microstrip SIR Bandpass Filters with Transmission Zeros H. Gan, D. Yang, Laboratory of Radio Frequency and Microwave Technology THPJ-4: A Design of a Ring Bandpass Filters with Wide Rejection Band Using DGS and Spurline Coupling Structures C. Kim, D. Ahn, Soonchunhyang University; K. Leong, T. Ito, University of California, Los Angeles THPJ-5: Novel Dual-band Planar Resonator and Admittance Inverter For Filter Design and Applications A.H. Yim, K.M. Cheng, The Chinese University of Hong Kong THPJ-6: Transmission Line Filter Design with Fully Controllable Second Passband C. Tsai, H. Lee, C. Tsai, National Cheng Kung University THPJ-7: Coupling Dispersion of Parallel-coupled Microstrip Lines for Dual-band Filters with Controllable Fractional Pass bandwidths S. Sun, L. Zhu, Nanyang Technological University THPJ-8: Synthesis and Diagnosis of RF Filters in Liquid Crystalline Polymer (LCP) Substrate S. Mukherjee, M. Swaminathan, Georgia Institute of Technology; S.S. Dalmia, Jacket Micro Devices THPJ-9: Wideband, High Rejection and Miniaturized Fifth Order Bandpass Filter on LCP Low Cost Organic Substrate C. Quendo, E. Rius, C. Person, J. Favennec, Y. Clavet, A. Manchec, LEST - UMR; A. Bairavasubramanian, S. Pinel, J. Papapolymerou, J. Laskar, Georgia Electronic Design Center THPJ-10: Analysis of a Novel Active Capacitance Circuit Using BJT and Its Application to RF Bandpass Filters I. Kim, S. Yun, Sogang University; Y. Chun, Dongguk University THPJ-11: GaAs Varactor Tuned Filter For Low Power Applications A. Eriksson, A. Deleniv, S. Gevorgian, Chalmers; B. Lumetzberger, N. Billstrem, Ericsson THPJ-12: Flat Time Delay Low Pass Filters Using Two CPW Topologies S. Khireddine, M. Drissi, National Institut of Science Application (INSA); R. Soares, DAlightCom THPJ-13: Dual-band Bandpass Filter in LTCC Y. Guo, L. Ong, M. Chia, Institute for Infocomm Research THPJ-14: Design Method of Closed Loop Resonator Filter Using Parallel Capacitor to Reduce Size H.J. Hong, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute; D.C. Park, Chungnam National University THPJ-15: Miniaturization of Lowpass Filter by Using Artificial Transmission Lines J.W. Park, G.N. Kim, J.P. Kim, Chnug-Ang University THPK-1: A Metamorphic GaAs HEMT Distributed Amplifier with 50 GHz Bandwidth and Low Noise for 40 Gbits/s G. Wolf, H. Happy, G. Dambrine, Inst d’Electronique de Microectronique et de Nanotechnologie; S. Demichel, R. Leblanc, OMMIC, F. Blache, R. Lefevre, OPTO+ THPK-2: Microwave VCO Susceptibility to Substrate Noise in a Fully-integrated 150 GHz SiGe HBT BiCMOS Technology J.P. Comeau, J.D. Cressler, Georgia Institute to Technology THPK-3: The High Frequency and Power Performance of SiGe HBTs with SIC Structure at Cryogenic Temperature M. Hsieh, Y. Chan, K. Liang, National Central University; C. Lee, D. Tang, G. Chen, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. THPK-4: Low Power 23 GHz and 27 GHz Distributed Cascode Amplifiers in a Standard 130 nm SOI CMOS Process C. Pavageau, A. Siligaris, L. Picheta, F. Danneville, IEMN-UMR CNRS; M. Si Moussa, J. Raskin, D. Vanhoenacker-Janvier, UCL; J. Russat, N. Fel, CEA THPL-1: Dual-band Butler Matrix for WLAN Systems C. Collado, Technical University of Catalonia; A. Grau, F. De Flaviis, University of California THPL-2: Understanding and Analyzing the Performance of MIMO Systems from the Microwave Perspective M.E. Bialkowski, S. Durrani, K. Bialkowski, P. Uthansakul, University of Queensland THPL-3: Miniaturized Rx Front-end Modules for Digital Beam Forming Arrays C. Person, LEST/ENST Bretagne-UBO; J. Coupez, ENST Bretagne; E. Goron, Y. Toutain, H. Lattard, F. Perrot, ANTENNESSA THPM-1: A Novel 5 GHz and 2.4 GHz Dual Band Transmitter Using Microstrip Defected Ground Structure S. Kang, J. Choi, K. Koo, University of Incheon 54 PANEL SESSIONS (cont) PWA: CAD TOOLS FOR MICROWAVE IC DESIGN Date & Time: Wednesday, June 15, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Location: PWC: VENTURE CAPITAL AND ENTREPRENEURIAL OPPORTUNITIES IN MICROWAVES Date & Time: Wednesday, June 15, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Hyatt Regency, Beacon B Organizer and Moderator: Emilio Sovero, Vitesse Corp. Panel: Sponsor: Kurt Johnson, Cadence Corp. Lawrence Williams, Ansoft Corp. Joe Civello, Agilent Technologies Organizers: Mike DeLisio, Wavestream Corp. Dave Rutledge, California Institute of Technology Panel: Ed Tuck, Falcon Fund Rich Wolf, Head of Tech Transfer at Caltech Doug Lockie, Gigabeam Mehran Matloubian, Smart Technology Ventures Sponsor: IMS 2005 The microwave industry has presented interesting opportunities for entrepreneurs. We have asked an outstanding panel to participate, with noted representatives from academics, the venture community, as well as microwave entrepreneurs. Our panel will discuss some of the new companies that they have been associated with, as well as the opportunities and challenges that they encountered along the way. PWB: TRENDS FOR FUTURE DEEP SPACE EXPLORATION Date & Time: Wednesday, June 15, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Location: Hyatt Regency, Regency A/B/C Organizers: John Horton, J.B. Horton Group Alina Moussessian, JPL/Caltech Sponsor: Hyatt Regency, Regency D/E IMS 2005 The increasing complexity of microwave and millimeter-wave circuits and systems requires a complete design system that will go from the design to production with as little iteration as possible. At the present time a designer must use different tools for different aspects of the design, i.e. electrical, electromagnetic, thermal all of which could seriously impact its performance. Proper interface is always a design risk. This panel will explore current and future developments of integrated tools to address these issues. Panel: Location: PTHA: ON THE IMPACT OF NANOTECHNOLOGY ON THE MICROWAVE FIELD Date & Time: Thursday, June 16, 12:00 PM–1:20 PM Rob Manning, JPL/Caltech Adam Steltzner, JPL/Caltech Chad Edwards, JPL/Caltech Faramaz Davarian, JPL/Caltech Location: Hyatt Regency, Regency A/B Organizer: Héctor J. De Los Santos, NanoMEMS Research, LLC Panel: Imran Mehdi, JPL, Caltech Peter Burke, University of California, Irvine Victor Lubecke, University of Hawaii Robert E Miles, University of Leeds Olivier Vendier, Alcatel Space Robert Trew, North Carolina State University Sponsor: IMS 2005 IMS 2005 This panel session will provide a forum to discuss challenges and future technologies for deep space exploration. The panelists will discuss past and future Mars missions. This will include the successful Mars Exploration Rover mission and future Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) missions. Challenges of landing on Mars and future deep space telecommunication strategies including a Ka-band communication link will also be discussed. Nanotechnology has been heralded as “the next big thing.” Indeed, the annual federal budget for Nanotechnology R&D reached $849M in 2004. While the potential for big payoffs in the areas of Nanoelectronics, Nanocomputation, Nanomechanics, Nanoengineering, Nanobiotechnology, Nanomedicine and Nanochemistry dominates research, little attention seems to have been paid to the exploitation of nanotechnology in the field of microwave technology. This panel brings together experts in nanotechnology and microwaves, who will explore how the virtues of nanotechnology, in particular, its ability to produce electronic and mechanical devices with dimensions down to nanometer scales, may motivate and impact the development of new opportunities in our field of microwave technology. 55 FRIDAY TUTORIALS TFA: FERRITE, FERROELECTRIC, AND OTHER SPECIAL MATERIALS FOR MICROWAVE CONTROL Date & Time: Friday, June 17; 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: vide tunability for filters, phase control for steerable antennas, or nonreciprocal behavior. This workshop will concentrate on the fabrication and application of a wide variety of these “microwave control materials.” Speakers from both industry and academia from the US, Europe, and Japan will present results of their ongoing studies. Several promising techniques aimed at low-cost fabrication and improved performance of these materials have been under development in recent years. Entirely new materials fabrication techniques are being investigated, and the resulting microwave properties are being evaluated. The session will start with a discussion of the criteria for selecting ferrite materials to achieve specific requirements of operating frequency, power level, tunability, and environmental conditions such as temperature. Emphasis will be on recent developments in manufacturing methods for these materials, including traditional ceramic processing, new tape casting methods, and low temperature cofired ceramic (LTCC) techniques. The next speakers will describe new techniques for the fabrication of artificial ferrites and composite ferrite/dielectric structures. These approaches give a unique ability to control the microwave properties of these materials. We next have a presentation on the application of these types of ferrites for optical devices. The possibility of making high frequency and millimeter-wave nonreciprocal devices without magnets will be explored in a presentation on the fabrication and application of magnetic nanowires embedded in nonmagnetic substrates. The application of nanotechnology promises to allow entirely new microwave materials to be developed. Two talks will describe recent work in RF-absorbing ferrites for noise suppression in high speed digital systems, and the development of international standards for these materials. The final speakers will cover the companion “controlled material” area of ferroelectrics. These are the dielectric analogs of ferrites. An overview of the topic will be followed by presentations on recent advances in producing materials with improved microwave properties. This tutotial extends the sequence of workshops in previous years: “Ferrite CAD and Applications” (1996), “System Requirements for Ferrite Components” and “Ferrite Measurements and Device Applications” (both in 1997), “Integration of Ferrite Devices into Future Radar, Wireless and Space Applications” (1998), “Future Trends in Ferrite Devices and Technology” (2000), “Ferrite Devices and Materials for Millimeter-Wave Applications” (2001), “Issues in Ferrites and Dielectrics for High Power Applications” (2003), “Modern Measurements of Ferrite Materials for Microwave and Millimeter-wave Devices” (2004). Long Beach Convention Center, Room 201B Topics & Speakers: ✗ Narrow Linewidth Ferrites and Behavior in Circulators, G. Argentina, Pacific Ceramics ✗ Low-Anisotropy Ferrites and Hexagonal Ferrites, T. Countis, Countis Labs ✗ Microwave Ferrites and Device Fabrication, T. Vaughn, EMS Technologies ✗ LTCC Compatible Garnets, R. Lebourgeois, Thales R&T ✗ LTCC Compatible Dielectrics, J-P. Ganne, Thales R&T ✗ Ferromagnetic Loaded Composites as Substitute Materials for Ferrites to Achieve Microwave Tunability, P. Queffelec, P. Gelin, Univ. of Brest ✗ Garnet Oxide Crystals for Optical Devices, T. Sekijima, Murata Mfg. Co. Ltd. ✗ Modeling and Design of Microwave Devices Based on Ferromagnetic Nanowires, A. Saib, Université Catholique de Louvain ✗ Noise Suppression Sheet/Films for Digital Devices and Equipment, M. Yamaguchi, Tohoku University ✗ World Standardization of Noise Suppression Sheets at IEC TC51/WG10, H. Ono, NEC Tokin Co. ✗ Tutorial Overview of Tunable Dielectrics, S. Stemmer, University of California, Santa Barbara ✗ BST Process and Integration Issues, T. Taylor, Agile Materials & Technologies Inc. ✗ MBE Growth of Oxides, D. Schlom, Penn State Univ. Organizers: S.N. Stitzer, Northrop Grumman Corp. R. York, Agile Materials & Technologies J.D. Adam, Northrop Grumman Corp. L.E. Davis, University of Manchester Sponsor: MTT-13: Ferrites and Ferroelectrics FRIDAY Traditionally, the study of materials whose microwave properties can be controlled externally has focused on ferrites. Recent advances in materials technology have expanded this topic so that it now covers both magnetic and dielectric materials whose microwave properties can be controlled by the application of external magnetic or electric fields. Use of these materials can pro- 56 FRIDAY TUTORIALS TFB: SIGNAL INTEGRITY MODELING AND ANALYSIS Date & Time: Friday, June 17; 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: trends and consequently, it makes signal integrity analysis a critical part in the design cycle. Therefore, accurate and complex models that include second order effects become an essential part in studying and analyzing the whole system performance. Consequently, measurement, characterization, and validations of these models become very vital in order to maximize the models accuracy and render them more beneficial to the analysis. With chip frequency approaching 5GHz and beyond and with the integration of RF fronts ends in mobile computing platforms, microwave principles have to be applied for managing electromagnetic interference. This is becoming a major problem due to the complexity of the system containing thousands of interconnects with embedded RF functions in the package. This half-day workshop covers recent advances in signal integrity modeling and design. The topics covered include on-die substrate coupling, a subject that has recently received considerable attention, especially with the emergence of the need for GHz range mixed signal designs integration. The workshop will also discuss modeling of on-die inductors and on-board EBG structures, two critical advances that are expected to have a strong impact on board and chip design. Moreover, the workshop will discuss practical 3D modeling for interconnects in full wave analysis packages, including accurate port definitions and placement. Different methodologies for targeting a comprehensive understanding for the system under test in both the frequency and time domains will be addressed. This workshop will present these and other critical advances, but more importantly, the workshop will address the relevance of these advances to practical real-world engineering design. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203C Topics & Speakers: ✗ High-Speed Signal Integrity Issues, M. Abdulla, Intel Corp. ✗ Signal Integrity Methodologies; Time Domain vs. Frequency Domain, A. Badawi, Cairo University ✗ Power Delivery Analysis, M. Swaminathan, Georgia Institute of Technology ✗ EMI/EMC and Advanced Topics including Electromagnetic Band Gap Structures, O.M. Ramahi, University of Maryland at College Park Organizers: M. Abdulla, Intel Corp. O.M. Ramahi, University of Maryland at College Park Sponsors: MTT-1: Computer-Aided Design MTT-15: Microwave Field Theory In the last decade, the accumulated knowledge on signal integrity analysis and design has matured considerably. This is accompanied by the emergence of specialized simulations, modeling, and analysis tools. Typically, signal integrity analysis is applied to the system, package, and on-die circuit design cycles. Furthermore, in complex system design, the signal integrity requirements strongly drive the physical design of the system, such as on-die layout, package and board designs. In addition, the on-chip system integration is among the current industry 57 FRIDAY WORKSHOPS WFA: PHYSICS, THEORY, FABRICATION AND APPLICATIONS OF MICROWAVE METAMATERIALS Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Software Defined Radios require specific concentration of RF research and engineering work. The scope of this workshop is to discuss the most important RF aspects of this field. Regulatory issues may influence and will be influenced by the advance of SDRs. Broadband and multiband antennas will play an important role for the realization of SDRs with spectral adaptivity. In order to shift the digital signal processing parts as close as possible to the antenna the required RF components have to fulfill a number of requirements. Different schemes for the receiver architectures as well as transmitter approaches will be discussed. Presentations on SDR and beamforming and the relation between analog and digital aspects of SDRs will conclude the workshop. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102AB Topics & Speakers: ✗ Negative Index Metamaterials: Fundamentals and Possibilities, D.R. Smith, Duke; J. Pendry, Imperial College London ✗ Electromagnetic Theory of Metamaterials and Their Potential Engineering Concepts, N. Engheta, University of Pennsylvania; R.W. Ziolkowski, University of Arizona ✗ Negative Refractive Index Transmission Line Metamaterials and Microwave Applications, G.V. Eleftheriades, A.K. Iyer, University of Toronto ✗ Recent Advances in CRLH Based Microwave Circuit Components, C. Caloz, École Polytechnique of Montreal, T. Itoh, University of California, Los Angeles ✗ Application of Metamaterial Concepts to The Design Of Compact Microwave Filters, F. Martín, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; R. Marqués, Universidad de Sevilla; M. Sorolla, Universidad Pública de Navarra ✗ Engineering Plasmonic Metamaterials and Superlens, X. Zhang, University of California Organizers: C. Caloz, École Polytechnique of Montréal F. Martín, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Sponsor: MTT-15, Microwave Field Theory WFC: ADVANCES IN AUTOMATED MODELING AND MICROWAVE DESIGN Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ Knowledge-Aided Design, and Directions for Microwave CAD, K.C. Gupta, University of Colorado ✗ Automated Design and Optimization Exploiting Surrogate Models and Space Mapping, J.W. Bandler, Bandler Corp. ✗ Automated Modeling and Trends in ANNs for Microwave Design, Q.J. Zhang, Carleton University ✗ Applications of Fuzzy Logic for Microwave Design, R. Mansour, University of Waterloo ✗ Advances in Simulation and Optimization of Large Nonlinear RF/Microwave Circuits, V. Rizzoli, University of Bologna ✗ Automated Tuning and Optimization of Microwave Filters and Multiplexers, M. Yu, ComDev ✗ Advances in Nonlinear Behavioral Modeling, D. Shreurs, Katholieke University Leuven ✗ Applications of ANN to Microwave Component and Circuit Modeling, J. Xu, Carleton University; M. Yagoub, University of Ottawa ✗ Computational Intelligence, R. Hecht-Nielsen, University of California San Diego ✗ RF Amplifier Modeling and Compensation: Model Reference Adaptive Control (MRAC) and Cortical Theory Based Models, P. Draxler, Qualcomm Metamaterials (MMs) are electromagnetically homogeneous structures exhibiting exciting properties not readily available in nature. They include the so-called left-handed (LH) materials, also referred to as negative refractive index (NRI) materials, which are characterized by anti-parallel phase and group velocities or, equivalently, simultaneously negative permittivity and permeability. Over the past five years, the fundamental properties of MMs have been demonstrated theoretically, numerically and experimentally by various groups around the world, and the first applications have already started to emerge. This workshop displays a panel comprehending the most prominent pioneers of MMs, who will cover all the aspects of the field: fundamental physics and electromagnetic theory, transmission line theory and microwave applications, and micro-nanofabrication technologies. In addition, future prospects for MMs will be discussed. WFB: RF ASPECTS OF SOFTWARE DEFINED RADIO (SDR) Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ Regulatory Issues: Spectrum Pooling, D. Shrum ✗ Broadband Antennas, S. Lindenmeier, Universität der Bundeswehr München ✗ Configurable RF Systems, J.-F. Luy, DaimlerChrysler ✗ Direct RF Sampling, D. Akos, University of Colorado ✗ Frequency Conversion Processes in SDR Front-Ends, T. Mack, DaimlerChrysler ✗ Six Port Technology, K. Wu, University of Montreal ✗ Challenges for SDR – Transmitters, G. Fischer, Lucent Technologies ✗ SDR and Beamforming, J. Morton, University of Miami ✗ RF Front-End and Digital Signal Processing, M. Sliskovic, HarmanBecker J.-F. Luy, DaimlerChrysler Y.T.J. Morton, University of Miami Sponsors: MTT-9, Digital Signal Processing RFIC Symposium Organizers: Q.J. Zhang, Carleton University K.C. Gupta, University of Colorado Sponsor: MTT-1, Computer-Aided Design Significant advances continue in modeling and CAD, to meet the challenges of next generation microwave design. Increasing design complexity, coupled with tighter component tolerances and shorter design cycles, demand tools that are faster, more accurate and more automated than possible today. It becomes important to achieve EM/physics-based design accuracy not only at the component level, but also at the circuit and system levels. Efficient modeling for linear and nonlinear circuits with EM/physics oriented accuracy but much faster than direct EM/physics simulations is necessary. Recent advances in application of Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) and fuzzy logic for microwave design lead to new developments in efficient and automated modeling and CAD at both component and circuit levels. Applications are being made in modeling and design of microstrip and CPW circuits, multilayer interconnects, embedded passives, printed antennas, LTCC circuits, semiconductor devices, measurement standards, filters, amplifiers, mixers and so on. New CAD methods for optimization, statistical design, global modeling, and computational electromagnetics exploiting computational intelligence concepts are being developed. Knowledge based engineering concepts exploiting existing microwave knowledge and information, are being formalized into advanced microwave CAD methodologies such as knowledge-aided design, Long Beach Convention Center, Room 101 Organizers: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102C 58 FRIDAY WORKSHOPS WFE: RECENT ADVANCES IN RF MEMS Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 8:00 AM - 12:00 PM knowledge-based neural networks, and space mapping. This leads to new opportunities combining equivalent circuit/empirical models, EM/physics simulation, behavioral modeling, ANN and optimization algorithms for fast and accurate design of microwave circuits and systems. This workshop presents a tutorial review of the state of the art in these emerging directions. The presentations highlight implementable methodologies for automated modeling and design of microwave components, circuits and systems. The workshop covers fundamental concepts and methodologies, industrial applications, and future trends in R&D. Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ IBM Applications of RF MEMS, N. Hoivik, IBM Research and Development ✗ RF MEMS for Consumer Handset Applications, A. Morris, WiSpry ✗ RF MEMS Variable Capacitors for Consumer Wireless, T.B.A. (unconfirmed), Philips ✗ Miniature MEMS Switched Capacitors for RF Applications, D. Mercier, Univ. of Michigan ✗ Delivering RF MEMS Relays to Industry, T.B.A. (unconfirmed), MagFusion ✗ High-Lifetime RF MEMS Relays, J. Maciel (unconfirmed), RADANT MEMS ✗ RF MEMS Packaging, Testing, and Application, J. Ebel (unconfirmed), AFRL Wright Labs ✗ Reliability Testing of RF MEMS Capacitive Switches at THALES Research & Technology” A. Zaei, Thales ✗ High Reliability Low-Voltage Capacitive RF MEMS Switch, C. Omahony, NMRC ✗ Advances in Phased Array Technologies, J. Rock, US Army AM COM/AMRDEC WFD: ADVANCES IN HIGH-EFFICIENCY POWER DEVICE AND CIRCUIT TECHNOLOGIES Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 202 Topics & Speakers: ✗ High-Efficiency Power Amplifiers: An Overview, J. Schellenberg, Schellenberg Associates ✗ Advances in Device Technology (HFET, LDMOS, GaN) for Base Station Applications, C. Weitzel, W. Burger, Freescale ✗ Advances in Device Technology (GaAs/InP, HBTs, pHEMTs, etc.) for Microwave/Millimeter-wave Applications, R. Lai, Northrop-Grumman ✗ High-Efficiency PAs for Base Station Applications, S. Cripps, Hywave Assoc. ✗ 350W PA for 3G Base Stations, R. Ranson, Filtronic ✗ High-Efficiency Techniques for Wide Dynamic Range Applications (Handsets), P. Asbeck, UCSD ✗ Advances in High-Efficiency PAs For Millimeter-wave Applications, J. Komiak, BAE Systems Organizers: J. Schellenberg, Schellenberg Associates B. Geller, iTerra Communications Sponsors: MTT-5, Microwave High-Power Techniques MTT-20, Wireless Communications Long Beach Convention Center, Room 103AB Organizers: D. Hyman, XCom Wireless, Inc. G. Rebeiz, University of Michigan Sponsor: MTT-21, RF MEMS and Micromachining RF MEMS developers have shown many dramatic technological advances in the last five years, including impressive performance, packaging, and lifetime testing. Many RF MEMS product releases, however, have been lackluster, plagued by problems of low yield, high cost, and lack of customer confidence. Some of the big questions of 2000 to 2004 have been “Where are the RF MEMS parts?” and “Why aren’t they being used?” Industry analysts have responded by scaling back expectations and market penetration across all sectors. 2004 to 2005 has finally seen critical achievements regarding the leap to get RF MEMS out of component laboratories and into the hands of eager (and patient) customers. These achievements are not about amazing performance, or amazing cost reduction through amazing volumes. These achievements are about delivering parts and finally establishing RF MEMS as an industry instead of a decades-long science project. The workshop is divided into two parts in one half day session. Speakers in this workshop will discuss their problems and solutions to get RF MEMS parts shipped out the door. The first part of the workshop will focus on testing and qualification stumbling blocks and recent achievements. The second part of the workshop will focus on recent implementation of RF MEMS components into system-level demonstrations. Current and projected commercial and military systems require microwave power amplifiers with ever increasing performance. Higher output power levels with even better linearity and efficiency are required. All this, of course, must be achieved at lower costs and higher reliability. Recent PA workshops have generally focused on techniques to improve the linearity with little emphasis on efficiency. This workshop takes a somewhat different tack in that the primary focus is on efficiency, while examining the subsequent impact of efficiency on other performance parameters such as output power, linearity, gain, bandwidth, stability and reliability. In general there is a definite conflict between efficiency and linearity, and one of the objectives of this workshop is to explore this conflict and determine cost-effective trade-offs. With a focus on applications at microwave and millimeterwave frequencies (2 GHz on up), this workshop brings together some of the leading experts in microwave device and circuit technologies. The device topics include recent advances in GaAs, InP and Si device technologies (HBT, pHEMT, HFET, LDMOS and large band-gap devices) with emphasis on techniques (materials, gate length, breakdown voltage/leakage current, etc.) to improve device efficiency. The circuit technology topics include biasing, class of operation, waveforming or input/output tuning, etc. In addition, this workshop examines techniques to improve the amplifier efficiency over a wide dynamic range, particularly important for cellular handset applications. Circuit configurations include Doherty, LINC, Envelope Elimination & Restoration (Kahn) and Envelope Tracking. Practical commercial and military hardware examples will also be presented. WFF: VERY LARGE MICROWAVE ARRAYS FOR RADIO ASTRONOMY AND SPACE COMMUNICATIONS Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 8:00 AM–12:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203AB Topics & Speakers: ✗ Introduction and Overview, S. Weinreb, Caltech/JPL ✗ Expansion of the Very Large Array (VLA), P. Napier, NRAO ✗ Allen Telescope Array (ATA), D. DeBoer, SETI Institute ✗ Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA), L. Daddario, JPL ✗ An Array Based Deep Space Network (DSN), M. Gatti, JPL 59 FRIDAY WORKSHOPS WFH: SEE THROUGH WALL RADARS Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM ✗ Large Array with Focal-Plane Array Feeds for the SKA, P. Hall, CSIRO ✗ Phased-Array with All-Sky Imaging Capability, J. Bi deVaate, Astron ✗ Very Low Noise Amplifiers for Very Large Arrays, N. Wadefalk, Caltech Organizer: S. Weinreb, Caltech/JPL Sponsors: MTT-14, Microwave Low-Noise Techniques MTT-16, Microwave Systems Location: Topics & Speakers: ✗ Time Domain Measurements – Foundations & Correlation with Frequency Domain Measurements, S. Riad, Virginia Tech ✗ Synthetic Aperture Radars – Fundamentals and Applications, R. Avent, MIT Lincolin Lab ✗ SAR Sensor Technologies, K. Sorensen, Sandia National Labs ✗ Image Construction Techniques, M. Abidi, University of Tennessee ✗ See Through Walls, R. Paglione, Sarnoff Lab ✗ See Through Imaging, N. Enghata, University of Pennsylvania ✗ See Through Walls Issues, J. Ross Much greater sensitivity for reception of microwave signals from space is needed to support the growth of the space exploration program and for astronomical observations concerning fundamental questions about the formation of the universe. During the past decade the paradigm for increasing the microwave sensitivity has shifted from the construction of increasingly larger parabolic reflectors to large arrays of smaller antennas. In effect electronics are replacing steel. The arrays have advantages of lower cost per unit collecting area, higher angular resolution, multiple beaming or imaging, and soft failure. There are several new large arrays either under construction or in design. This workshop is intended as a forum for the engineers working on these arrays to interact with each other and with the suppliers of microwave components. It is anticipated that on the order of $1B to $2B in antennas, microwave receivers, digital processing equipment, and software will be purchased for these arrays in the next decade. Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203C Topics & Speakers: ✗ Introduction to EM/Circuit Codesign Flow, B. Brim, Ansoft Corp. ✗ Application of Combined EM and Circuit Analysis Techniques to Design a Dual Band Common Aperture Antenna Array, R.L. Eisenhart, Eisenhart and Assoc. ✗ Co-Simulation Techniques Using 3D EM and Circuit Simulators for Microwave Filter Implementations, S. Shin, RS Microwave ✗ Combined Application of EM and Circuit Analysis to QuasiLumped Filter Design, D. Swanson, Tyco Electronics ✗ EM/Circuit Co-Design of Active Nonlinear Circuits, Z. Popovic, University of Colorado ✗ An Overview of the Usage of EM and Circuit Analysis for RF MEMS Design, G.M. Rebeiz, University of California, San Diego Organizers: B. Brim, Ansoft Corp. Z. Popovic, University of Colorado Sponsor: MTT-15, Microwave Field Theory Organizers: A.E. Fathy, University of Tennessee N. Enghata, University of Pennsylvania A. Hophar, Villinova University M. Abidi, University of Tennessee S. El-Ghazaly, University of Tennessee Sponsor: MTT-16, Microwave Systems Today’s Army and especially the future Army must be prepared to fight in this new war zone with the same overmatching operational capability that it has brought to the mobile battlefield. The challenge is to design, develop, and field advanced system concepts using the latest technologies that will give the soldier an advantage in this new “battlefield”: the urban terrain. One such area is C4ISR technology and in particular synthetic imaging technology to achieve success (psychological and physical defeat of the enemy) with minimum friendly casualties and collateral damage. It is evident that successful tactical operations in Military Operations on Urban Terrain (MOUT) conditions will require a significant extension of C4ISR capabilities to provide commanders with instantaneous, precise information (measured in feet, not meters) on the 3D location and disposition of friendly, threat, and noncombatant personnel. In an urban warfare scenario, door-to-door searches with possible enemy engagement are inevitable and if poorly planned or executed could prove fatal. Ideally, in this tactical scenario, it is desired to provide a new and enhanced situation awareness capability or knowledge for the soldier that would allow him/her to know if and where people are located inside a building before entering, therefore potentially preventing death and injury. During the search operation, revealing where people are hiding, e.g. in a closet, without alerting them to the search is also required. Basically, during Covert Operations & Urban Warfare the ability to locate and assess an enemy position without risk while remaining undetected is mandatory. “See-through-the-wall radar” would require developing more than a fuzzy image or blob on the radar screen to identify targets. It is necessary to discriminate between a combatant or a bystander, and even possibly identifying side arms or larger weapons (i.e., wide RCS range of more than 20 dB). Therefore, the required resolution, here for example, is in the range of centimeters (10 cm could be sufficient), and the developed radars could range from being a simple fixed system (i.e., to estimate target range), a 2D array for two-dimensional array (i.e., for a 2D image), or even SAR radar for 2D or 3D images for a finer resolution. Current studies in this area will be presented from various very active researchers including different points of views. WFG: REDISCOVERING CIRCUIT DESIGN TECHNIQUES FOR MICROWAVE COMPONENTS, CIRCUITS AND SUBSYSTEMS: THE EFFICIENCY AND POWER OF EM/CIRCUIT CODESIGN Date & Time: Friday, June 17, 1:00 PM–5:00 PM Location: Long Beach Convention Center, Room 203AB This workshop will discuss microwave design procedures which apply a combination of electromagnetic (EM) and circuit analysis. Technical issues with the integration of EM and circuit analysis will be reviewed and solutions presented via simple examples. A number of specific designs in which a combination of EM and circuit analysis uniquely enabled the design or provided significant efficiency of design will be reviewed. Applications ranging from filters to amplifiers to MEMS, in both tube waveguide and multi-layered planar environments will be presented. 60 F R ARFTG 65th MICROWAVE MEASUREMENT CONFERENCE T A G Measurements for Millimeter-wave Applications AUTOMATIC RF TECHNIQUES GROUP 65th CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION Conference Chair Thomas G. Ruttan Intel Corp. T (503) 456-1245 F (503) 456-1223 thomas.g.ruttan@intel.com Technical Program Chair Nick Ridler National Physical Lab T +44-20-8943-7116 F +44-20-8943-7176 nick.ridler@npl.co.uk Exhibits Chair Prof. Joe Tauritz Universiteit Twente +31-53-489-4330 exhibits@arftg.org EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Brian Pugh, President Quorum Systems Inc. J. Gregory Burns, Vice President, Publications Northrop Grumman Nick Ridler, Secretary National Physical Lab Ken Wong, Treasurer Agilent Technologies Inc. Joseph Tauritz, Exhibits Universiteit Twente David Walker, Education NIST Welcome to the Automatic RF Techniques Group (ARFTG) Conference being held at the Renaissance Hotel on Friday, June 17, 2005. The conference will include technical presentations, an interactive forum, and an exhibition; all to give you ample opportunity to interact with your colleagues in the automated RF and microwave test community. The conference theme is “Measurements for Millimeter-wave Applications” with papers focusing on measurements for point-to-point communications, line-of-sight systems, automotive radar, differential measurements, traceability to national standards laboratories, models for measurement verification, vector network analysis, large-signal network analysis, power and noise including on-wafer measurements. Also, be sure to check for any joint ARFTG/IMS workshop being held. This year ARFTG is co-sponsoring two workshops: “On-wafer Microwave Measurement: State-of-the-Art and Future Directions” and “High Frequency Digital Backplane Interconnect Characterization and Design.” An important part of any ARFTG Conference is the opportunity to interact oneon-one with colleagues, experts and vendors in the RF and microwave test and measurement community. Whether your interests include high-throughput production or one-of-a-kind metrology measurements, complex systems or simple circuit modeling, small signal S-parameter or large-signal non-linear measurements, phase noise or noise figure, dc or lightwave, you will find an interested party and most likely an expert. Starting with the continental breakfast in the exhibition area, continuing through the two exhibition/interactive forum sessions and the luncheon, there will be ample opportunity for discussion with others facing similar challenges. You, along with the other attendees, may find that these interactions are often the best source of ideas and information for their current projects. So come and join us. You’ll find that the atmosphere is informal and friendly. LOCATION The 65th ARFTG conference will be held in Ballrooms I–V and the Foyer of the Renaissance Hotel. You may reserve your hotel room using the IMS Conference Housing Form. Visit www.ims2005.org for more information. Leonard Hayden, Publicity Cascade Microtech Mohamed Sayed, Nominations Consultant SCHEDULE William Eisenstadt, Standards Univerity of Florida Ronald Ginley, Electronic Communication NIST Raymond W. Tucker, Membership Air Force Research Lab Thomas G. Ruttan, Technical Coordinator Intel Corp. Dominique Schreurs, Workshops Ku Leuven Uwe Arz, Awards PTB Charles Wilker, MTT-S Liaison DuPont Superconductivity Friday, June 17 Activity Renaissance Hotel 7:00 AM – 4:00 PM 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM 8:00 AM – 9:45 AM 9:45 AM – 10:30 AM 10:30 AM – 12:00 NOON 12:00 NOON – 1:15 PM 1:15 PM – 3:00 PM 3:00 PM – 3:45 PM 3:45 PM – 5:00 PM Exhibition and Interactive Forum Continental Breakfast Speakers’ Breakfast Technical Session 1 Exhibition/Poster Session Technical Session 2 Luncheon Technical Session 3 Exhibition/Poster Session Technical Session 4 Ballroom III & Foyer Ballroom I & II Ballroom I & II Ballroom IV & V Ballroom III & Foyer Ballroom IV & V Ballroom I & II Ballroom IV & V Ballroom III & Foyer Ballroom IV & V EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS Chris Potter, ARMMS Liaison P&H Technology Consultants Jim L. Taylor, Executive Secretary EXHIBITS The 65th ARFTG Conference also offers an outstanding exhibition opportunity. Please contact our Exhibits Chair directly for further information. www.arftg.org 61 µAPS Microwave Application & Product Seminars MESSAGE FROM THE 2005 µAPS CHAIRMAN The Microwave Application Seminars (µAPS), now in their 10th year, serve as a forum for exhibitors at the International Mi-crowave Symposium to present the technology behind their commercial products and the special capabilities of their products. The presentations are 20 minutes in length and are open to all conference and exhibit attendees. Topics include CAD and Modeling Products and Technologies, Instrumentation and Measurement Techniques, Passive and Active Components, Subassemblies — Packaging — Interconnects and Manufacturing Processes. Speakers will often provide additional literature and information related to their products at the presentations and each person who attends can James Weiler receive a free CD-ROM with information from all presentations. Sessions will run from Tuesday through Thursday, June 14–16, at the Long Beach Convention Center, inside the exhibit area. We’re looking forward to seeing you in Long Beach! 2005 µAPS SCHEDULE The 2005 Microwave Application & Product Seminars will be held on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, June 14–16, 2005 in conjunction with the 2005 International Microwave Symposium at the Long Beach Convention Center. The series of individual presentations is open to any exhibition or conference attendee. Tuesday, June 14, 2005 Wednesday, June 15, 2005 Thursday, June 16, 2005 9:00 AM–4:30 PM 9:00 AM–4:50 PM 9:00 AM–12:00 PM James Weiler, µAPS Chair µAPS — MICROWAVE APPLICATION & PRODUCT SEMINARS — TECHNICAL PROGRAM TUESDAY, June 14, 2005 — LBCC SiGe BiCMOS Transceiver and SiGe Power Amplifier for 5.8 GHz WDCT Applications REIMANN, KRIMMER, BOSCHOF, GERLACH, ATMEL A 5–6 GHz High Gain SiGe Power Amplifier BISCHOF, GERLACH, ATMEL IMS Plenary Session (above Exhibit Hall) Transient Protection of MMIC Amplifiers M. MORDKOVICH, MINI-CIRCUITS PA Plus S. MARTIN, SKYWORKS AlGaAs PIN Diode Switches CURCIO, BROGLE, HOAG, M/A-COM Heterolithic Microwave Integrated Circuits T. BOLES, M/A-COM Very High Power MMICs Using 24V HVMSAG GaAs Process E. GRIFFIN, M/A-COM High Linearity HBT Driver Amplifiers MCINTOSH, DALTON, FOX, RIZZI, M/A-COM Automotive Applications for GaAs MMIC Amplifiers G. DELAVAL, P. LABASSE, UMS 9:00–9:20 AM 9:20–9:40 AM SESSION IA • 9:00–9:40 AM Active Components 9:40 AM–12:00 PM 12:00–12:20 PM 12:20–12:40 PM 12:40–12:50 PM SESSION IB 12:00–1:40 PM 12:50–1:00 PM Active Components 1:00–1:10 PM 1:10–1:20 PM 1:20–1:40 PM Dual-band Filtered GPS Low-noise Amplifier W.E. GORDON, SPECTRUM MICROWAVE Low Phase Noise for Crystal Oscillators DAVIS, PAINTER, CRANE AERO & ELECTRONICS A New High Q Microwave Resonator Tech for Oscillator and Filter Applications BATES, ZALOGLU, DIELECTRIC LABS Miniature LTCC Passive VHF and UHF Components DORAHELM, RADHA, SETTY, MINI-CIRCUITS LTCC Mixer Amplifiers Provide S-of-A Performance DAXIONG JI,SETTY, MINI-CIRCUITS RFID Readers REYNOLDS, WEIGAND, M/A-COM New Chipscale Small-Footprint PIN Diodes BROGLE, CARCIO, BUKOWSKI, M/A-COM Optical Micro-Resonator Microwave or Optical Filters D. FUNG, OEWAVES High Performance Multi-Throw Switches for Handset Applications GEORGE SAMIOTES, M/A-COM Low Cost Power Amplifiers for WLAN/PHS Applications DALTON, FOX, MCINTOSH, RIZZI, M/A-COM Low Cost Power Amplifiers for Cordless Applications STUDTMANN, ZHAO, MCINTOSH, RIZZI, M/A-COM Difference Between CMOS and GaAs Switch Performance R. BAKER, PEREGRINE SEMICONDUCTOR Power Amplifiers E. MAALOUF, FREESCALE 62 1:40–2:00 PM 2:00–2:20 PM 2:20–2:30 PM 2:30–2:40 PM 2:40–2:50 PM 2:50–3:00 PM SESSION II 1:40–4:30 PM 3:00–3:20 PM Components 3:00–3:10 PM 3:10–3:20 PM 3:20–3:30 PM 3:30–3:50 PM 3:50–4:10 PM 4:10–4:30 PM WEDNESDAY, June 15, 2005 — LBCC CAD and Modeling Products and Techniques C. EMSON, VECTOR FIELDS Mixer Synthesis R. EHRICH, EAGLEWARE CORP. IE3D EM Simulation and Optimization Package Ver. 11 J-X. ZHENG, ZELAND SOFTWARE Accurate Models Accelerate Reference Designs for RFIC Amplifiers CAPWELL, CLAUSEN, WELLER, DUNLEAVY, MODELITHICS FEKO EM Structure Simulator M. O’BRIEN, EMSS Time Gated Statistical Analysis of Power R. THEISS, BOONTON ELECTRONICS Innovative Methods in Remcom Inc. Simulation Software LUEBBERS, LANGDON, CARPENTER, REMCON A Novel Software System for Hybrid Electromagnetic-thermodynamic Simulation MALGORZATA CELUCH, QWED & WARSAW UNIV. WASP-NET Fast Microwave Component and Antenna Design and Optimization F. ARNDT, MIG MICROWAVE INNOVATION WaveWizard CAD Solution for Passive Waveguide Components R. BEYER, MICIAN EMPiCASSO, EMLouge and EMTerrano: CAD Tools for EM Modeling K. SABET, EMAG TECH Neural Based Modeling of EM Structures and Microwave Devices Q.J. ZHANG, CARLETON UNIVERSITY Schematic-driven EM Extraction MICHAEL HEIMLICH, APPLIED WAVE RESEARCH Millimeter-wave Imaging-TADAR D. VIZARD, J. FRANCO, FARRAN TECHNOLOGY ELVA-1 Family of Broadband mm-wave Radios D. KORNEEV, ELVA-1 MILLIMETER-WAVE Enhanced Thin Film Technology for High Density Integration D. KAGI, REINHARDT MICROTECH Conductor Surface Profile (Rrms) on Total Circuit Attenuation in Microstrip NORMYLE, MCCARTHY, WYNANTS, TACONIC Ultra Stable Tuner V. MALLETTE, FOCUS MICROWAVES INC. Multi Purpose Tuner C. TSIRONIS, FOCUS MICROWAVES INC. High Power High Speed 100 MHz Mechanical Tuner R. MEIERER, FOCUS MICROWAVES INC. High Performance Silicon Based Passive Modulators R. HOULILAN, M/A-COM R-Pak High Power RF & Microwave Liquid Crystal Polymer Packages J. ROMAN, RJR POLYMERS Integrating Thermal Management Solutions in PWBs JOHNSON, MCMASTER, MERIX CORP. Organic Laminate Alternative to LTCC J. CHAMBERLIN, JMD Microwave Digital Receiver Design Technique YI, YANG, HEFEI HTMICROWAVE CO. LTD. 9:00–9:20 AM 9:20–9:40 AM 9:40–10:00 AM 10:00–10:20 AM 10:20–10:40 AM 10:40–11:00 AM SESSION III 9:00 AM–1:20 PM 11:00–11:20 AM CAD 11:20–11:40 AM 11:40–12:00 PM 12:00–12:20 PM 12:20–12:40 PM 12:40–1:00 PM 1:00–1:20 PM 1:20–1:40 PM 1:40–2:00 PM 2:00–2:20 PM 2:20–2:40 PM 2:40–2:50 PM SESSION IV 1:20–4:50 PM 2:50–3:00 PM Packages & Materials 3:00–3:10 PM 3:10–3:30 PM 3:30–3:50 PM 3:50–4:10 PM 4:10–4:30 PM 4:30–4:50 PM THURSDAY, June 16, 2005 — LBCC Millimeter-wave Measurement of Complex Permittivity H. SUZUKI, KEYCOM Advances in Load-Pull Based Device Characterization G. SIMPSON, MAURY MICROWAVE Modern VNA Measurement Techniques for Mixers and Amplifiers D. SAVAGE, AGILENT 9:00–9:20 AM SESSION V 9:00–10:00 AM 9:20–9:40 AM Test & Measurement 9:40–10:00 AM Electroless and Electrolytic Au Plating for RoHS Compliant Packaging PATEL, DYE, MCV TECHNOLOGIES INC. Miniature Low Loss High Selectivity Microwave Planar Filters BATES, ZAGLOGLU, DIELECTRIC LABS Frequency Converters T. LIU, FARRAN TECHNOLOGY Direct Quadrature Modulator S. MARTIN, SKYWORKS 45W/90W/180W GaN HEMT for Base Station Applications S. NAKAJIMA, EUDYNA 200 kW RF Power Amplifier Using LDMOS Transistors S.K. LEONG, POLYFET RF DEVICES 10:00–10:20 AM 10:20–10:40 AM SESSION VI 10:00–11:40 AM 10:40–11:00 AM Components & Processes 11:00–11:20 AM 11:20–11:40 AM 11:40 AM–12:00 PM 63 EXHIBITORS The MTT-S Exhibition is an annual event that has taken place since 1970. It comprises more than 450 microwave, subassembly, component, device, material, instrument and design software suppliers and each year draws approximately 10,000 microwave engineers involved in the design of systems, subsystems, components 3G Metalworx A-Alpha Waveguide Co. Accent Optical Technologies Accu-Tech Laser Proessing Inc. Accumet Engineering Corp. Actipass Co. Ltd. AdTech Ceramics Advance Reproductions Corp. Advanced Control Components Inc. Advanced Modular Sputtering Inc. Advanced Power Technology RF Advanced Test Equipment Aeroflex Inc. Aerowave Inc. Aethercomm Inc. Agilent Technologies Aimmet Industrial Co. Ltd. Akon Inc. ALC Microwave Inc. Altair Technologies Inc. American Microwave Corporation American Technical Ceramics AMETEK Specialty Metal Products AML Communications Inc. Amplifonix AmpliTech Inc. – Gold Sponsor Analog Devices Inc. Anaren Anatech Electronics Inc. Anritsu Co. Ansoft Corp. – Gold Sponsor Antelope Valley Microwave Antenna Systems Magazine Applied Engineering Products Applied Radar Inc. Applied Thin-Film Products Applied Wave Research Inc. AR Worldwide ARA/Seavey Engineering ARC Technologies Inc. Arlon Materials for Electronics Artech House Publishers Assemblies Inc. Astrolab Inc. Atmel Corp. Auriga Measurement Systems LLC Avalon Equipment Corp. Avnet Electronics Marketing AVX Corp. Bandwidth Semiconductor LLC Barry Industries Inc. Besser Associates Inc. Bird Technologies Group BL Microwave Ltd. Boonton Electronics Bradley University Bullen Ultrasonics Inc. C-MAC MicroTechnology C.E. Precision Assemblies Inc. CAD Design Software California Eastern Labs Cambridge University Press CAP Wireless Inc. Carleton University Cascade Microtech Celeritek Inc. Centellax Inc. Century Seals Inc. CeramTec North America Cernex Inc. Changzhou Wujin Fengshi Comm Equip Channel Microwave Corp. Charter Engineering Inc. Chelton Microwave Chin Nan Precision Electronics Co. Ciao Wireless Inc. Circuits Processing Technology ClearComm Technologies LLC Coilcraft Inc. Coleman Microwave Co. ComDev Ltd. Commercial Microwave Technology Compac Development Corp. Compel Electronics Inc. Compex Corp. Component Distributors Inc. Component Sources International Connectronics Inc. CoorsTek Corning Gilbert Inc. Corry Micronics Cougar Components Corp. CPI Canada Inc. Crane Aerospace & Electronics Cree Microwave Inc. CST Of America Inc. – Gold Sponsor CTT Inc. Cuming Microwave Corp. Custom Cable Assemblies Inc. Cyber Technologies USA DA-LightCom.Micronic Daico Industries Inc. DBm Delta Electronics Mfg. Corp. Delta Microwave DeWeyl Tool Company Dexter Magnetic Technologies Inc. Diablo Industries Inc. Diamond Antenna Dielectric Laboratories Inc. DiTom Microwave Inc. Dorado Instrumentation Dow Key Microwave DRS-Signal Sulutions West (SSW) Ducommun Technologies Inc. DuPont Microcircuit Materials Dynawave Inc. Eagleware-Elanix Eclipse Microwave Inc. EDO Corp. EE – Evaluation Engineering Egide USA Inc. Elcom Technologies Inc. Electro Rent Corp. Elisra Electronic Systems Ltd. Elva-1 Ltd. EM Research Inc. EM Software & Systems EMAG Technologies Inc. Emerson & Cuming Microwave Products Emerson Network Power EMF Systems Emhiser Micro-Tech Empower RF Systems EMS Technologies Inc. Enon Microwave Inc. ETS – Lindgren Eudyna Devices USA Inc. European Business Press/CMP European Microwave Week Excelics Semiconductor Inc. EZ Form Cable Corp. F&K Delvotec Inc. Fairchild Semiconductor Farran Technology Ltd. Fastron Electronics Inc. FCT Electronics LP Ferdinand Braun Institut (FBH) Ferrite Co., The Filtel Microwave Inc. Filtran Microcircuits Inc. Filtronic Compound Semiconductors Filtronic Sage Laboratories Inc. First Technology Flann Microwave Ltd. Flexco Microwave Inc. Flomerics Inc. Florida RF Labs Inc. Focus Microwaves Inc. Freescale Semiconductor – Platinum Sponsor FTS Systems Inc. G.T. Microwave Inc. Gaiser Tool Co. Georgia Institute of Technology GGB Industries Inc. Giga-Tronics GigaLane Co. Ltd. Global Communication Semiconductors Gore, W.L., & Associates Inc. Gowanda Electronics Harbour Industries Haverhill Cable & Mfg. Corp. HCC Industries Inc. Herley Industries Inc. Herotek Inc. Hesse & Knipps Inc. High Frequency Electronics Hittite Microwave Corp. HoSung Technics Co. Ltd. HT Microwave (HeFei) Co. Ltd. Huber + Suhner Inc. IEEE Microwave Magazine IMST GmbH Infineon Technologies – Silver Sponsor InnoSent GmbH Integra Technologies Inc. International Manufacturing Svcs. Interpoint, a Crane co. Ion Beam Milling Inc. and devices. The 2005 Exhibition will be held in the Long Beach Convention Center. Exhibition hours are Tuesday, June 14 and Wednesday, June 15 from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, and Thursday, June 16 from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM. Following is a list of exhibiting companies. The list is complete as of press time, but may not include all companies. IRC/TT Electronics Isotec Corp. iTerra Communications ITF Co. Ltd. ITT Industries IW Inc. J MicroTechnology Inc. JCA, An Endwave Company Jersey Microwave JFW Industries Inc. JMD Johanson Manufacturing Corp. Johanson Technology Inc. Johnson Components Johnstech International Inc. JQL Electronics Inc. JyeBao Co. Ltd. K&L Microwave Inc. Keithley Instruments Inc. Keragis Corp. Keycom Corporation KMIC Technology Inc. KP Microwave Components Inc. Krytar Inc. KW Microwave Corp. Kyocera America Inc. L-3 Electron Devices Labtech Ltd. Lark Engineering Co. Litron Inc. LNX Corp. Locus Microwave Logus Microwave Corp. Lorch Microwave LPKF Laser & Electronics Lucas/Signatone Corp. M/A-COM Inc. M2 Global Technology Ltd. Maury Microwave Corp. McGeary, S.G. Co. MCV Technologies Inc. MECA Electronics Inc. Mega Circuit Inc. MegaPhase Meggitt Safety Systems Inc. Merix Corp. Merrimac Industries Inc. MICA Microwave Mician GmbH Micreo Limited Micro Lambda Wireless Inc. Micro Networks Corp. Micro-Chem Inc. Micro-Coax Inc. Micro-Mode Products Inc. MicroFab Inc. Microfabrica Inc. Micrometrics Inc. Micronetics Inc. Micronetics Noise & Products Group Micronetics VCO Group Microphase Corp. Microsemi Corp. Microtech Inc. Microwave Applications Group Microwave Communications Labs Inc. Microwave Concepts Inc. Microwave Development Co. Inc. Microwave Development Labs Inc. Microwave Device Technology Corp. Microwave Dynamics Microwave Engineering Europe Microwave Journal Microwave Product Digest Microwave Resources Inc. Microwave Technology Inc. Microwaves & RF Mid-Atlantic RF Systems MiG Microwave Innovation Group Millitech Inc. Milmega Ltd. Mimix Broadband Inc. – Silver Sponsor Mini-Circuits – Gold Sponsor Mini-Systems Inc. Mission Telecom Co. (KWLI) Mitel Srl MITEQ Inc. Mitsubishi Electric & Electronics Modelithics Inc. Modular Components National Inc. Molex Inc.-RF/Microwave Connector Morecom International Morgan Advanced Ceramics, GBC Morgan Electro Ceramics MtronPTI 64 M.T. srl Murata Electronics N.A. Inc. – Silver Sponsor Nagase Narda An L-3 Communications Co. Natel Engineering Co. Inc. National Instruments NDK America Inc. NEC Microwave Tube Ltd. Neltec Netcom Inc. Networks International Corp. NICT (Nat’l. Inst. Info. & Comm. Tech.) Noble Publishing Noise Com Northeast Electronics Corp. Northrop Grumman Novacap NTK Technologies Inc. Octagon Communications OEwaves Inc. OPHIR RF Inc. P/M Industries Inc. Palomar Technologies Pascall Electronics Ltd. Passive Microwave Technology Penn Engineering Components Inc. Penton Media Inc. Peregrine Semiconductor Corp. Philips Semiconductors Piconics Inc. Picosecond Pulse Labs Plextek Ltd. Polyfet RF Devices Polyflon, A Crane Co. Poseidon Scientific Instruments Precision Photo-Fab Inc. Presidio Components Inc. Process Materials Inc. Pulsar Microwave Corp. Q Microwave Inc. Q-Tech Corp. Quantum Leap Packaging Inc. Queens Plating Co. Inc. QUEST Microwave Inc. QuinStar Technology Inc. QWED R&F Products, Laird Technologies R&K Company Ltd. R-Theta Thermal Solutions Inc. Racal Instruments Rache Corp. Radiall Inc. Reactel Inc. Reed Business Information Reinhardt Microtech AG RelComm Technologies Remcom Inc. REMEC Inc. Remtec Inc. Renaissance Electronics Corp. Resin Systems Corp. RF Depot.Com Inc. RF Design RF Globalnet RF Industries RF Integrated Corp. RF Micro Devices – Gold Sponsor RFHIC Richardson Electronics RJR Polymers Inc. RLC Electronics Inc. Rockwell Scientific Rogers Corp. Rohde & Schwarz Inc. Roos Instruments Inc. Rosenberger N.A. LLC RTx Technology Co. Ltd. San-Tron Sandvik Osprey Ltd. Sangshin Elecom Co. Ltd. Sarnoff Corp. SatCon Electronics Sawcom Tech Inc. Schleifring Und Apparatebau GmbH Scientific Microwave Corp. SDP Components Inc. Semflex Inc. Semi Dice Inc. Semicon Associates SG Technology SGC Technologies Inc. Shadow Technologies Inc. Shenzhen Kingsignal Cable Tech Co. Shoulder Electroniccs Limited Sigma Systems Corp. Simulation Technology & Applied Res Sinclair Manufacturing Sirenza Microdevices Inc. Skyworks Solutions Inc. Smart R&C Co. Ltd. Sonnet Software Inc. Sonoma Scientific Inc. Sophia Wireless Inc. Soshin Electronics Sources East Southwest Microwave Inc. Spectra-Mat Inc. Spectrum Elektrotechnik GmbH Spectrum Microwave Sprague-Goodman Electronics Inc. SSI Cable Corp. Stamping Technologies Inc. State Of The Art Inc. STC Microwave Systems, a Crane co. STMicroelectronics Inc. Storm Products Co. StratEdge Corp. SUSS MicroTec Inc. SV Microwave Inc. Swift, C.W. & Associates Inc. Synergy Microwave Corp. Sypris Test And Measurement Taconic Talley Communications Corp. Tecdia Inc. Technical Research & Manufacturing Tektronix Inc. Teledyne MEC Teledyne Microwave Teledyne Relays Teledyne Reynolds Teledyne Microelectronic Technologies Telegartner Inc. Telephus Inc. Temptronic Corp. Tensolite Terabeam/HXI Test Equity Inc. Thales Components Corp. Thin Film Concepts Inc. Thin Film Technology Thinfilms Inc. Times Microwave Systems TLC Precision Wafer Technology Tokimec Inc. Toshiba America Electronic Comp. TRAK Microwave (a Smiths co.) Trans-Tech Inc. Transcom Inc. Trilithic Inc. TriQuint Semiconductor Tronser Inc. TRS-RenTelco TRU Corp. Tuck, A.J. Co. Tyco Electronics/Printed Circuit Gr. UltraSource Inc. United Monolithic Semiconductors Universal Circuits Inc. Universal Microwave Corp. Universal Switching Corp. UTE Microwave Inc. Valpey Fisher Corp. Vector Fields Inc. Vectron International VIDA Products Inc. Vishay Intertechnology Inc. Wall, A.T. Co. Wavestream Corp. Wenzel Associates Inc. Werlatone Inc. West Bond Inc. Wiley, John & Sons Inc. Williams Advanced Materials WIN Semiconductors Corp. Winchester Electronics Wireless Design & Development Wireless Europe WiseWave Technologies Inc. WJ Communications Inc. XCom Wireless Inc. Xpedion Design Systems Inc. Zeland Software Inc. – Silver Sponsor Zentrix Zifor Enterprise Co. Ltd. IEEE MTT-S ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE 2005 OFFICERS President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .K.C. Gupta Vice President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Karl Varian Treasurer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mike Harris Secretary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Amir Mortazawi ELECTED ADCOM MEMBERS 2005 2006 2007 M. DeLisio S.M. El-Ghazaly J. Hausner K.C. Gupta H.M. Harris T. Lee L. Katehi D. Harvey J. Modelski S. Kawasaki J.S. Kenney V.K. Nair D. Lovelace N. Kolias B.S. Perlman R. Sorrentino D. Rutledge W.A. Shiroma K.R. Varian R. Weigel R. Snyder IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENTS 2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .R.J. Trew 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .M.J. Schindler 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.T. Barr, IV HONORARY LIFE MEMBERS S.B. Cohn A.A. Oliner K. Tomiyasu T. Itoh T.S. Saad L. Young FUTURE IEEE MTT-S INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIA 2006 — SAN FRANCISCO, CA — JUNE 11–16, 2006 General Chairman TPC Co-Chairman John Barr Agilent Technologies Tel (707) 577-2350 j.barr@ieee.org Paul Khanna Celeritek Tel (408) 330-1351 apskhanna@ieee.org Finance TPC Co-Chairman Roger Pollard The University of Leeds Tel +44 (113) 3432002 r.pollard@ieee.org Local Arrangements Steve Rosenau Agilent Technologies Tel (650) 485-3728 rosenau@ieee.org Publicity Steve Brozovich Snap-On Diagnostics Tel (408) 292-2526 x359 sbrozovich@ieee.org Ken Wong Agilent Technologies Tel (707) 577-2616 ken_wong@ieee.org Secretary Simon Wood Cree Microwave Tel (408) 962-7712 simonmwood@ieee.org 2007—HONOLULU, HI 2009—BOSTON, MA 2011—BALTIMORE, MD June, 2007 Co-Chairmen June 2009 Chairman June 2011 Chairman Wayne Shiroma University of Hawaii Tel (808) 956-7218 shiroma@ieee.org Mike DeLisio Wavestream Corp. Tel (909) 599-9080 delisio@ieee.org Fred Schindler RF Micro Devices Tel (978) 670-2230 mschindler@rfmd.com Jeffrey Pond Naval Research Laboratory Tel (202) 767-2862 j.m.pond@ieee.org 2008—ATLANTA, GA 2010—ANAHEIM, CA 2012—MONTREAL, CAN June, 2008 Chairman June 2010 Chairman June 2012 Chairman Joy Laskar Georgia Tech Tel (404) 894-5268 joy.laskar@ece.gatech.edu J.K. McKinney Dura Sales of Southern California Inc. Tel (909) 612-1044 j.mckinney@ieee.org 65 Ke Wu Ecole Polytechnique Tel (514) 340-4711 x5991 ke.wu@ieee.org 2005 IEEE MTT-S AWARDS 2005 MICROWAVE CAREER AWARD This award recognizes an individual for a career of meritorious achievement and outstanding technical contribution in the field of microwave theory and techniques. This year’s recipient is David N. McQuiddy, Jr. Citation 2005 MICROWAVE PRIZE The Microwave Prize recognizes, on an annual basis, the most significant contribution by a published paper to the field of interest of the Microwave Theory and Techniques Society. Papers under consideration are those published during the period January 1 to December 31 of the year preceding the Fall Meeting of the Administrative Committee at which the award is considered. This year’s recipients are Milan M. Ilic and Branislav M. Notaros. Each Citation reads: “FOR A CAREER OF LEADERSHIP, MERITORIOUS ACHIEVEMENT, CREATIVITY AND OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTIONS IN THE FIELD OF MICROWAVE THEORY AND TECHNIQUES.” “FOR THEIR PAPER, ‘HIGHER ORDER HIERARCHICAL CURVED HEXAHEDRAL VECTOR FINITE ELEMENTS FOR ELECTROMAGNETIC MODELING’, PUBLISHED IN THE IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MICROWAVE THEORY AND TECHNIQUES, VOL. 51, NO. 3, MARCH 2003, PAGES 1026–1033.” 2005 DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD This award is given in recognition of significant contributions and outstanding service to the Microwave Theory and Techniques Society and the microwave profession over a sustained period of time. This year’s recipient is Harlan G. Howe, Jr. Citation 2005 N. WALTER COX AWARD The N. Walter Cox Award has been established in recognition of the qualities of N. Walter Cox and his service to the MTT Society prior to his untimely death in 1988. It is given to a Society volunteer whose efforts on behalf of MTT-S best exemplify Walter’s spirit and dedication. This year’s recipient is Jozef Modelski. Citation “FOR HIS OUTSTANDING AND DEDICATED SERVICE TO THE SOCIETY.” 2005 DISTINGUISHED EDUCATOR AWARD This award was inspired by the untimely death of Prof. F. J. Rosenbaum (1937–1992), an outstanding teacher of microwave science and a dedicated Administrative Committee Member and contributor. The award recognizes a distinguished educator in the field of microwave engineering and science who best exemplifies the special human qualities of Fred Rosenbaum who considered teaching a high calling and demonstrated his dedication to the Society through tireless service. This year’s recipient is Koji Mizuno. Citation “FOR EXEMPLARY SERVICE, GIVEN IN A SPIRIT OF SELFLESS DEDICATION AND COOPERATION.” 2005 OUTSTANDING YOUNG ENGINEER AWARD The Outstanding Young Engineer Award was established to recognize an outstanding young MTT-S Member(s), who has distinguished him/herself through achievement(s), which may be technical (within the MTT-S Field of Interest), may be exemplary service to the MTT-S, or may be a combination of both. Nominee must be no more than 38 years of age (i.e., must not have reached their 39th birthday) and must be an MTT member at time of nomination. This year’s recipients are Joseph Pekarek and Thomas Weller. Citation for J. Pekarek: “FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS AS AN EDUCATOR, MENTOR AND ROLE MODEL OF MICROWAVE ENGINEERS AND ENGINEERING STUDENTS.” 2005 MICROWAVE PIONEER AWARD The Microwave Pioneer award recognizes an individual or a team not exceeding three persons having made outstanding pioneering technical contributions that advance microwave theory and techniques and described in an archival paper published at least 20 years prior to the year of the award. This year’s recipient is the team of Hermann Statz and Robert A. Pucel. Citation “FOR INNOVATION IN SOFTWARE DESIGN AND OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT IN ENTREPRENEURSHIP.” Citation for T. Weller: “FOR CONTRIBUTIONS MADE IN THE FIELD OF PLANAR CIRCUIT DESIGN AND MODELING, AND TO IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF MICROWAVE EDUCATION.” “FOR DEVELOPMENT OF THE FIRST COMPREHENSIVE PHYSICSBASED MODEL OF THE SHORT-GATE FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR AND A DESIGN TOOL WHICH HAS PLAYED A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN THE EMERGING FIELD OF MMICS.” 2005 MICROWAVE APPLICATION AWARD The Microwave Application Award recognizes an individual or team for outstanding application of microwave theory and techniques. This year’s recipient is J. Stevenson Kenney. Citation “FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF POWER AMPLIFIER LINEARIZATION TECHNIQUES AND INSERTION INTO CELLULAR/WIRELESS SYSTEMS.” 66 IEEE FELLOWS: CLASS OF 2005 The Member Grade of Fellow is conferred in recognition of unusual and outstanding professional distinction. It is awarded at the initiative of the IEEE Board of Directors following a rigorous nomination and evaluation process. Individuals receiving this distinction have demonstrated extraordinary contributions to one or more fields of electrical engineering, electronics, computer engineering and related sciences. This Grade is not conferred automatically on nomination; only a fraction of those nominated are elected. Eleven MTT-S Members who were evaluated by our Society were elected to the Grade of Fellow, effective 1 January 2005: NAME CITATION Henri Marius Baudrand For contributions to the electromagnetic modeling of microwave circuits and antennas. Giuseppe Conciauro For contributions to numerical modeling of microwave passive components. Janusz Andrzej Dobrowolski For contributions to computer-aided design of microwave networks. Herbert Michael Harris For contributions to the electrical and thermal properties of wide bandgap semiconductors. In addition seventeen other MTT-S Members were elected to the Grade of Fellow in 2005 after their qualifications were evaluated by other IEEE Societies: NAME CITATION Steven I. Franke (AP-S) For contributions to wave propagation, atmospheric sensing, and to engineering education. George L Heiter For contributions to microwave circuits, including linear amplifiers and space diversity combiners. James Joseph Komiak For contributions to monolithic microwave integrated circuits, high power amplifiers, and transmit/receive modules. Joy Laskar For contributions to the modeling and development of high frequency communication modules. Janina Elzbieta Mazierska For contributions to measurements of high temperature superconducting and dielectric materials. Cam Nguyen For contributions to microwave integrated circuits and systems. Phillip Miles Smith For contributions to microwave high electron mobility transistors. Kevin John Webb For contributions to numerical modeling and characterization techniques of passive and active devices. Frank Greta Olyslager (AP-S) For contributions to theoretical and computational electromagnetics. Edward Joseph Rothwell (AP-S) For contributions to the development of radar target identification, discrimination, and detection schemes. Douglas H. Werner (AP-S) For contributions to computational electromagnetics in antenna theory. Domine Leenaerts (CA-S) For contributions to nonlinear circuit theory and design. Masaaki Kuzuhara (ED-S) For contributions to Group III-V microwave power devices. Kurt R. Richter (Education) For contributions to the theory and application of computational electromagnetics. Koichi Ito (AP-S) For contributions to the development of antennas for mobile communications and medical applications. Branko M. Kolundzija (AP-S) For contributions to electromagnetic modeling of composite metallic and dielectric structures. Jin-Fa Lee (AP-S) For contributions to computational electromagnetics. Yonhua Tzeng (IE-S) Le-Wei Joshua Li (AP-S) For contributions to dyadic Green’s functions, spheroidal wave functions, and waves in complex media. For contributions to diamond manufacturing processes. Pavel J. D. Kabos (Magnetics) For contributions to computational electromagnetics and to subsurface sensing applications. For contributions to the metrology of high frequency spin wave dynamics in bulk and thin film magnetic structures. Ken-ya Hashimoto (UFFC-S) For contributions to simulation and design for surface acoustic wave devices. For contributions to the method of moments in electromagnetics. Jeffrey Hugh Reed (VT) For contributions to software radio and communications signal processing and for leadership in engineering education. Qing Huo Liu (AP-S) Joseph R. Mautz (AP-S) GENERAL INFORMATION Information Booth: Pamphlets and information on the Long Beach area will be available at a booth centrally located in the registration area of the LBCC. The hospitality suite is located in the Harbor Room of the Hyatt Hotel. Sign in and guest badges will be required to insure exclusive guest use. The hospitality suite will be open for guest use as follows: Sunday, June 12 11:30 AM–5:30 PM Monday–Thursday, June 13–16 7:00 AM–4:30 PM Friday, June 17 7:00 AM–12:30 PM IEEE/MTT-S Memberships: Membership information is provided on page 8 of this program. Those who apply for IEEE membership before registering for the Symposium will be eligible for IEEE member discounted registration fees. Membership applications and payments will be accepted at the IEEE Booth in the registration area. IEEE members (or on-site applicants) who register for the full Symposium and have not been MTT-S members in the past year will be offered a free basic MTT-S membership, good until the end of the year. Children: Children under the age of 14 will not be admitted to the exhibition hall at any time. Drinks and Refreshments: Free coffee and soft drinks will be available during mid-morning and mid-afternoon breaks in the refreshment areas in the exhibition hall. Smoking: Smoking is not permitted in the LBCC. All restaurants in Long Beach are completely smoke-free but, generally, if there is a lounge attached, some smoking may be permitted. It is best to inquire when making reservations. Recruiting: Businesses do not send their personnel to the IMS to be recruited by other businesses. To ensure that these meetings continue in the future, IEEE policy insists that recruiting does not occur at the Symposium. Recording of Technical Presentations: The recording of technical presentations by video or audio recorders or cameras is not allowed without the permission of the speaker and notification of the session organizer. 67 2005 IEEE MTT-S TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE Mohamed Abouzahra Douglas Adam Barry Allen Peter Asbeck John S. Atherton John Bandler Rajeev Bansal Zaher Bardai Scott Barker H. Clark Bell Pierre Blondy Georg Boeck Luciano Boglione Vicente Boria Olga Boric-Lubecke Jens Bornemann Hermann Boss Tom Brazil Gailon Brehm Klaus Breuer Steve Brozovich Eric Bryerton Charles Buntschuh Nick Buris Edmar Camargo Richard Campbell Bob Caverly Malgorzata Celuch Kai Chang Richard Chen Yung Kai Chen JC Chiao Debabani Choudhury Terry Cisco James Crescenzi Steve Cripps Gilles Dambrine Nirod Das Lionel Davis Paul Draxler Rhonda Drayton Dan Elad Samir El-Ghazaly Badawy Elsharawy Rudy Emrick Murat Eron Aly Fathy Andrea Ferrero Bernard Geller Spartak Gevorgian Charles Goldsmith Mike Golio Anand Gopinath Mark Gouker Kavita Goverdhanam Ian Gresham K.C. Gupta Madhu S. Gupta Ramesh Gupta Wojciech Gwarek Leonard Hayden John Heaton Patric Heide Wolfgang Heinrich George Heiter Rashaunda Henderson Peter Herczfeld Wolfgang J.R. Hoefer Glenn Hopkins Derry Hornbuckle Ho C. Huang Ian Hunter Kenji Itoh Tatsuo Itoh David Jackson Robert W. Jackson Dieter Jaeger Sridhar Kanamaluru Linda Katehi Allen Katz Roger Kaul Steve Kenney Amarpal (Paul) Khanna Reinhard Knöchel Jim Komiak Agnieszka Konczykowska Bruce Kopp H. John Kuno Paolo Lampariello Joy Laskar Timothy Lee Jenshan Lin Olivier Llopis Victor Lubecke Gregory Lyons Stephen (Steve) Maas Mohammad Madihian Raghu Mallavarpu Gianfranco Manes Raafat Mansour Steve Marsh Jon Martens Bobby Matinpour J.P. Mattia David Meharry Francisco Mesa Ryan Miyamoto Jozef Modelski Mauro Mongiardo Amir Mortazawi Vijay Nair Michel Nakhla Julio Navarro Cam Nguyen Clark Ngyuen Toshio Nishikawa Edip Niver Dalma Novak Takashi Ohira Arthur A. Oliner Abbas S. Omar John Owens Dev Palmer John Papapolymerou Jose Carlos Pedro Barry S. Perlman Luca Perregrini Anh-Vu Pham Aryeh Platzker Carl Pobanz Roger D. Pollard George Ponchak Marian Pospieszalski Joseph Pribetich Frederick Raab Lamberto Raffaelli Richard Ranson James Rautio Jose Rayas-Sanchez Gabriel Rebeiz Kate Remley Leonard D. Reynolds Ali Rezazadeh Edward Rezek Alfy Riddle Vittorio Rizzoli David Root Luca Roselli Arye Rosen Clemens Ruppel Peter Russer Tom Ruttan Paul Saunier James Schellenberg Manfred (Fred) Schindler Franco Sechi 68 Alwyn Seeds John Sevic Arvind Sharma Wayne Shiroma Peter Siegel Phillip Smith Chris Snowden Richard Snyder Roberto Sorrentino Richard A. Sparks Peter Staecker Joe Staudinger Eric Strid Almudena Suarez Roger W. Sudbury Dan Swanson Bela Szendrenyi Yusuke Tajima Jesse J Taub Manos Tentzeris Tsuneo Tokumitsu Kiyo Tomiyasu Robert J. Trew Ching-Kuang Tzuang Ruediger Vahldieck André Vander Vorst John Walker Chi Wang Keh-Chung (K.C.) Wang Robert Weigel Andreas Weisshaar Charles (Chuck) Weitzel Thomas (Tom) Weller Cheng P. Wen Scott Wetenkamp James Whelehan Ke Wu HungYu (David) Yang Hui-Wen Yao Robert York Ming Yu Peter Zampardi Jan Zehentner Q.J. Zhang 2005 IEEE MTT-S IMS STEERING COMMITTEE POSITION NAME POSITION NAME General Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Charlie Jackson Vice Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tatsuo Itoh TPC Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dave Rutledge TPC Co-Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mike DeLisio TPC Co-Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bob York Electronic Paper Submissions Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jon Hacker Electronic Paper Submissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Blythe Deckman Finance Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.K. McKinney Finance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dave Savage Local Arrangements Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tim Lee Local Arrangements Vice Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Peter Pusateri Local Arrangements Conference Planner . . . . . . . . . . .Elsie Cabrera Local Arrangements Day Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Cynthia Hang Local Arrangements Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Greg Surbeck Local Arrangements AV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mircea Metes Local Arrangements Signs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .K.C. Wang Interactive Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Louis Liu Interactive Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bob Eisenhart Interactive Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jitendra Goel Interactive Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Michael Aust IEEE Conference Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Elsie Cabrera Conference Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LRW Associates Plenary Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gary Guo MicroAps (µAps) Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jim Weiler MicroAps (µAps) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Odell Graham Exhibition Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Harlan Howe, Jr. Exhibition Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Howard Ellowitz Guest Program Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mary Jacobs Historical Exhibit Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Naresh Deo Student Paper Contest Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Scott Wedge Student Paper Contest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jim Rosenberg Symposium Database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Anne Lee Web Team Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tim Lee Publicity Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Steve Swift Publicity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Terry Cisco Symposium Secretary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Arvind Sharma Publications Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Debabani Choudhury Wireless Networking Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dale Yee Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Siva Chebolu Workshops & Tutorials Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ethan Wang Workshops & Tutorials Publicity . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jonathan Fredrick Workshops & Tutorials Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . .Younkyu Chung Workshops & Tutorials (Sunday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Yi-Chi Shih Workshops & Tutorials (Monday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Paul Yu Workshops & Tutorials (Friday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kevin Leong Workshops & Tutorials (Friday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kevin Miyashiro Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Harry Pomeranz Focused Sessions Co-Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Alina Moussessian Focused Sessions Co-Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .John Horton Special Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Steve Maas Panel Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Emilio Sovero Registration Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .John Kuno Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chic Shishido Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Julie Maas Interactive Forum Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Hector De Los Santos Interactive Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Larry Williams Member at Large . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Reynold Kagiwada Member at Large . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chuck Swift Member at Large, AdCom Awards Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ed Rezek Ham Radio Social . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Clark Bell Hospitality Co-Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bev Pomeranz Hospitality Co-Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Susan Cisco Banquet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mary Jacobs Wireless Connectivity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Chad Deckman IP PDA Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tim Lee TPMS Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jeff Pond RFIC2005 Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Joe Staudinger IMS2006 Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .John Barr IMS2006 TPC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Roger Pollard International Liaison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Zaher Bardai Legal Liaison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Kasody Long Beach Convention & Visitors Bureau . . . . . . . . . .Barbi Mason Coastal LA Section Chair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Michael Briggs Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Madhu Gupta ARFTG Liaison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Greg Maury Women in Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Anne Lee University Liaison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bill Deal University Liaison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vesna Radisic Golf Tournament . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Philip Arnold Golf Tournament . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Harvey Olifson 69 HISTORICAL EXHIBIT HISTORICAL ELECTRONICS MUSEUM The Historical Electronics Museum is the permanent home of the MTT-S Historical Collection between Symposia. The Museum holds many microwave-related items besides the MTT-S Collection, including parts of the SCR-270 (Pearl Harbor) radar and a complete SCR-584 radar, which was used with the proximity fuze in World War II. It also contains an impressive library of over 10,000 books and 11,000 journals. The Museum is located near Baltimore-Washington International Airport, and is approximately 20 minutes from downtown Baltimore. Additional information on the Museum can be found on its Web site at http://www.hem-usa.org/, or call (410) 765-2345. The Microwave Theory and Techniques Society Historical Exhibit will be located in the Exhibit Hall of the Long Beach Convention Center. Symposium attendees are encouraged to visit the Historical Exhibit during the regular exhibition hours, Tuesday through Thursday. The Historical Exhibit includes the MTT-S library collection of books and documents with descriptions of early theoretical and experimental achievements in microwaves. A collection of historical artifacts will be on display chronicling the history of modern MMIC chips and Naresh Deo microwave modules from their inception. It is planned to include historical artifacts from local companies such as Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Hughes, Rockwell and others. Also included will be exhibits from Jet Propulsion Laboratory and other local aerospace and defense organizations. LONG BEACH INFORMATION beach is perfect for families with young children. If you are coming with young children and have access to a car, head to Mother’s Beach. It is quiet, well protected, and patrolled by lifeguards. Along the coast is a bike path. You can rent bicycles several places nearby and enjoy riding along the coast or inland along one of the river bikeways. The Long Beach Museum of Art is mile or two from the convention and downtown area. It is housed in a large turn of the century house on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. The exhibits change periodically. The museum café overlooks the ocean, so you can enjoy the view over lunch. Visitors can enjoy a variety of other activities in Long Beach. The Museum of Latin American Art also hosts frequent visiting exhibits. You can stroll among the canals of Naples Island, looking at the lovely homes, their gardens, the canals, and docks with pleasure boats and gondolas. Second Street in Belmont Shore is several blocks of restaurants and small shops. Acres of Books, a fantastic used book store, has 6.5 miles of heavily loaded bookshelves. It is within walking distance of the large hotels on Ocean Boulevard. When you are strolling through the downtown area of Long Beach, look up at the buildings. Long Beach is striving to preserve its architectural history, refurbishing its old buildings, and converting some into lofts. There are some grand private homes along Ocean Avenue in the California Craftsman, Bungalow, and Art Deco styles. First Street through Bluff Park is virtually a museum of twentieth century residential styles. On the campus of California State University at Long Beach is the pyramid, a behemoth sports facility, bright blue, and pyramid shaped. If you are on campus, visit the Japanese gardens and enjoy a few moments of peace and beauty. Perhaps one of Long Beach’s greatest assets is its ethnic diversity. Long Beach is home to the world’s largest Cambodian community outside of Cambodia itself. In addition, Long Beach hosts people from Southeast Asia, Samoa, and many parts of Latin America. Each group brings with it its customs and foods. Ethnic restaurants abound. Once you have covered Long Beach, you can get on the lightrail trolleys, called the Blue Line, and travel to downtown Los Angeles. The Blue Line connects with other trolley and subway lines, so by traveling the rails you can enlarge your horizons. Other sights around the Los Angeles area, such as museums, amusement parks, and the zoo are accessible by car. Long Beach has much to offer its guests. The weather should be warm and pleasant, but bring a sweater or light jacket for the sometimes cool evenings. We look forward to seeing you in Long Beach! Julie Maas and Steve Maas Welcome to Long Beach and the IMS 2005! We hope that you enjoy your visit. The second largest city in the Los Angeles basin (after LA itself), with almost a half million people, Long Beach has much to offer attendees and their families. The city, a dusty military town of a quarter century ago, has grown into a modern center of culture, entertainment, and commerce. Much of that growth has occurred in the past dozen years, and now the downtown sparkles with large, new hotels, office buildings, and entertainment complexes. Long Beach has a long, rich history. In 1784 (yes, for Southern California this is old!), the area that is now Long Beach was a Spanish land grant. This was ranching country, with two ranchos encompassing the area of the present city. The town, then known as Wilmore City, was established in 1882; a few years later, it was renamed Long Beach. The railroad brought throngs of visitors to Long Beach, and, at the turn of the century, the electric trolley caused the area to grow into a resort and a commercial center. The easy living and pleasant climate attracted Midwesterners, many of whom were retired farmers, an influx that gave Long Beach the affectionate nickname, Iowa by the Sea. From 1902 until 1910, Long Beach was the fastest growing city in the US. In 1921, the discovery of oil in Long Beach and Signal Hill (a small city completely encircled by Long Beach) brought with it a building boom. The city grew enormously in area and population. In 1933 a devastating earthquake hit Long Beach. Much of the rebuilding was in the Art Deco style, which was in vogue at the time. Even today, Long Beach has a large concentration of Art Deco architecture. Long Beach has a port, which, together with the port of Los Angeles, is the largest on the west coast. At one time it hosted a major naval base, but in the 90s it closed its doors. In 1967 Long Beach purchased the cruise liner, the Queen Mary. It is still a fixture in the harbor, open to the public for touring, for fine dining, and as a hotel. The Queen Mary is the center of the newly revitalized harbor area. That area now boasts the Aquarium of the Pacific, a delightful place to spend a half-day watching the diverse coastal land and sea creatures from the Pacific Rim, restaurants, and a charming harborside for evening strolls. The new Pike restaurant and entertainment area is next door to the Long Beach Convention Center. (The name comes from an amusement park on the same site in the 1920s.) A short walk from the Pike is Shoreline Village. In addition to the Aquarium, Shoreline Village has a variety of restaurants, both local and national chains, movie theaters, water taxis, docks for harbor cruises, and shops. Long Beach, of course, is best known for its, well, long beach. Wide expanses of sandy beach extend from the harbor, next to Shoreline Village, south along the coast. A breakwater about a mile offshore guarantees that there is virtually no surf, so the 70 LONG BEACH INFORMATION (CONT) TRANSPORTATION SOCIAL EVENTS Long Beach is part of the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. It is located in Los Angeles county, about 25 miles south of the heart of the city of Los Angeles. With three interstates running through Long Beach, it is very easy to get to and from the city by car. Long Beach has its own airport and its own bus and taxi services. It is also served by the Los Angeles Metro light rail system. Downtown Long Beach is very friendly to pedestrians, and traveling local streets is easy with a good map. There are three nearby airports and a total of five airports hosting all major domestic and international air carriers in the LA area. Long Beach Airport (airport code LGB): The Long Beach Convention Center and most conference hotels are located just 7 miles by ground transportation from the Long Beach airport. The Long Beach airport is served by Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, America West Airlines, and Jet Blue Airways. The airport offers taxi service and rental cars. www.longbeach.gov/airport/. Los Angeles International Airport (LAX): The world’s fifth largest passenger airport is 23 miles northwest of the convention center by car. Over 50 commercial airlines fly in and out of LAX. The airport offers taxi and van service to Long Beach, rental cars, and Metro service via bus to light rail. www.lawa.org/lax/. John Wayne Airport (SNA): John Wayne airport in Newport Beach is 25 miles from the convention center. It is served by 12 commercial airlines. The airport offers taxi and van service as well as rental cars. www.ocair.com. Burbank Bob Hope (BUR) and Ontario (ONT) Airports are also located in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. The three closest airports offer van service to Long Beach. Contact Prime Time Shuttles (www.primetimeshuttle.com/ SoCal.htm) at 800-733-8267 or Super Shuttle (www.super shuttle.com/htm/cities/lax.htm) at 800-258-3826 for rates and reservations. Service to Burbank and Ontario may be limited. Long Beach Transit offers several different local bus services. For attendees staying downtown or at the Queen Mary or West Coast hotels, the Pine Avenue Link (www.lbtransit.com/pine_ avenue.html) and the Passport Service (www.lbtransit.com/ passport.html) offer comfortable, brightly colored busses for free transportation around the downtown area. Busses typically offer 10–15 minute frequency to stops. There is a small fee to travel to east Long Beach. Taxis are available through the Long Beach Yellow Cab company (888-529-3556 or locally at 562-435-6111). If you make your hotel arrangements directly through IEEE, transportation will be provided to conference attendees staying at hotels near the airport away from the downtown area. You can reach Long Beach from outside the city using public transportation via the Los Angeles Metro Rail system (www.mta.net/riding_metro/riders_guide/rail_overview.htm). There is Metro service to LAX via bus and light rail. Auto Rentals: Long Beach and the Los Angeles area offer a wide variety of rental car options, including all major airports and through many downtown hotels. Rental car companies among airports, hotels, and stand-alone branches will vary. A sample of available rental car companies is listed below. Alamo, www.alamo.com, 800-327-9633; Avis, www.avis.com, 800-331-1212; Beverly Hills Rent-A-Car, www.bhrentacar.com, 800-479-5996; Budget, www.budget.com, 800-221-1203; Dollar, www.dollarrentacar.com, 800-800-3665; Enterprise, www.enterprise.com, 800-736-8222; Hertz, www.hertz.com, 800-654-3131; National, www.nationalcar.com, 800-227-7368; Thrifty, www.thrifty.com, 800-847-4389 RFIC SYMPOSIUM RECEPTION: Sunday evening, June 12, is a highlight of RFIC technical activity and social festivities. The evening’s activities begin at 5:30 PM with the RFIC Plenary Session, officially opening the RFIC technical program. The Plenary is held in the Grand Ballroom of the Long Beach Convention Center. All attendees are invited to the Plenary. Following the Plenary, the RFIC Steering Committee is hosting a reception in the Grand Ballroom of the Long Beach Convention Center. All RFIC Symposium attendees are invited to attend the reception from 7:00 to 9:00 PM. Admission tickets to the reception for RFIC Symposium attendees will be included in the registration packets. Conference attendees who do not register for the RFIC Symposium can purchase reception tickets at the conference registration desk. MICROWAVE JOURNAL/MTT-S RECEPTION: All Microwave Week attendees and exhibitors are invited to attend a reception hosted by Microwave Journal and MTT-S on Monday, June 13 from 6:00 to 8:00 PM at the Aquarium of the Pacific on Shoreline Drive, two blocks from the convention center. IEEE MTT WOMEN IN ENGINEERING RECEPTION: The IEEE MTT Women in Engineering (WIE) committee will host a meeting and reception on Tuesday, June 14 from 5:30 to 7:00 PM in the Hyatt Hotel. Meet and interact with professionals who share an interest in promoting the WIE forum. HAM RADIO SOCIAL: All radio amateurs who are attending IMS2005 are cordially invited to a social gathering on Tuesday, June 14 from 6:00 to 9:00 PM in the Hyatt Hotel. INDUSTRY-HOSTED COCKTAIL RECEPTION: Symposium exhibitors will host a cocktail reception on Wednesday, June 15 from 5:45 to 7:15 PM at the Hyatt Regency Hotel. Complimentary beverage tickets will be included in the registration packages. IEEE MTT-S AWARDS BANQUET: The annual Awards Banquet will be held on Wednesday, June 15 from 7:30 to 10:00 PM at the Hyatt Hotel. This evening will consist of an elegant dinner, awards presentation and entertainment. Major society awards will be presented at this event. The banquet is free of charge to the awardees. IEEE MTT-S STUDENT AWARDS LUNCHEON: Student Paper Awards, MTT Graduate Fellowships and MTT Undergraduate Scholarships will be presented at the Student Awards Luncheon at noon, Thursday, June 16. The Luncheon is free of charge for all IMS2005 student paper finalists and their advisors. TECHNICAL ATTENDEES BREAKFAST: Monday–Thursday (June 13–16), at the LBCC from 7:00 to 9:00 AM. This breakfast is for all persons registered as technical participants in the IMS, RFIC or ARFTG (not open to those registered only as exhibitors or guests). IMS/RFIC/ARFTG badge required for admission. 71 GUEST PROGRAM All Tours will be made or cancelled based on advance registration. We must have 30 advance registrations in order to operate most tours. Some tours have limited space. Please use advance registration if at all possible to avoid cancellation of the tours or the chance of missing a tour you want to go on. There may be slight changes in tour times, so please check the web page or at the hospitality suite. Monday, June 13, 2005 Hours: 9:00 AM–3:30 PM Guests will begin their day with a walking tour of San Juan Capistrano. This tour offers guests a unique perspective of one of Orange County’s legendary towns, covering over 200 years of rich architectural history. Guests are invited to stroll down Los Rios Street, the oldest residential neighborhood in California, where adobe houses that date from 1794 still stand! There is even time for shopping in the quaint stores. Guests will then proceed to Cedar Creek Inn, where they will enjoy a tasty lunch. The Inn is located directly adjacent to the Mission. The afternoon will begin with a self-guided tour of the Mission San Juan Capistrano, perhaps most known for its “return of the swallows” each year, and also known as the “Jewel of the Missions.” Perhaps nowhere else does the sheer tranquility and benign character of mission life and Old Spanish California come so vividly to life. Containing precious and graphically intact testimonials, the mission serves as a living treasure house for a glorious chapter in early California history. Following are additional Web sites you may wish to access for viewing other activities and purchasing individual tickets to local entertainment events in the Long Beach area. Long Beach Convention and Visitors Bureau http://www.visitlongbeach.com/ Disneyland http://disney.go.com/Disneyland/ Universal Studios http://www.universalstudios.com/ Knotts Berry Farm http://www.knotts.com/ Getty Museum http://www.getty.edu/ Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens http://www.huntington.org Aquarium of the Pacific http://www.aquariumofpacific.org/ LACMA – Los Angeles County Museum of Art http://www.lacma.org/ Page Museum – La Brea Tar Pits http://www.tarpits.org/ Long Beach Museum of Art http://www.lbma.org/ Long Beach Museum of Latin American Art http://www.molaa.com/ Cost of Tour: $75.00 pp (advance registration); $90.00 pp (on-site registration) Hosted by Access California. Tuesday, June 14, 2005 Hours: 9:00 AM–3:00 PM Pasadena and the Huntington Pasadena is famous for the Rose Parade each New Year, but you’ll find that this city celebrates much more! Our day will begin with a scenic drive along the tree-shaded streets of the City of Roses, viewing the opulent homes in this beautiful area. Next you will visit the beautiful Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens. The 207 acre estate was formerly the home of Henry E. Huntington, pioneer railroad tycoon and philanthropist. The art gallery collection emphasizes English and French paintings of the 18th century and includes many famous works such as Gainsborough’s “Blue Boy” and Lawrence’s “Pinkie.” The library houses extensive holdings of English and American first editions, manuscripts, maps, letters, and many famous objects including a Gutenburg Bible, a first folio of Shakespeare plays, and Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography in manuscript. The botanical gardens cover 150 acres with more than 14,000 different kinds of plants. As a special treat, guests will enjoy an English tea luncheon at the Rose Garden Tea Room, where a buffet of finger sandwiches, strawberries and cream, imported cheeses, and desserts awaits. The English tea service also includes warm scones and jam, and hot or iced tea. The Hospitality Suite for IMS2005 attendee guests will be located in a private Concierge Lounge in the Hyatt Hotel. Guest badges will be required. The suite will be open as follows: Sunday, June 12, 2005 – 11:30 AM–5:30 PM Monday–Thursday, June 13–16, 2005 – 7:00 AM–4:30 PM Friday, June 17, 2005 – 7:00 AM–12:30 PM IMS steering committee members will be available for guest assistance in the suite. In the suite, guests may enjoy a daily continental breakfast and afternoon refreshment. Courtesy computers for EMAIL use will be available on site for adult guests. The guided tours will be leaving from the Hyatt Lobby. Sunday, June 12, 2005 Hours: NOON–5:00 PM A Day in San Juan Capistrano Getty Museum Tour Set high on a dramatic hilltop overlooking Los Angeles, the Getty Center unites the J. Paul Getty Trust’s Museum, Institutes and Grant Program on one site. The Center, opened in 1997, sits on 110 acres of the Santa Monica Mountains and is surrounded by gardens and terraces that provide sweeping views of Los Angeles, the mountains, and the ocean. Five two-story pavilions, interconnected around an open central courtyard, house the ever-changing exhibitions and the expanding permanent collections of pre-20th-century European paintings, drawings, illuminated manuscripts, sculpture, decorative arts, and 19th- and 20th-century American and European photographs. Upon arrival at the museum, guests board a tram, which will take them to the top of the hill and the museum buildings. There, they will be greeted by a knowledgeable docent who will guide them through an overview of the complex. Guests can then wander through the exhibits at their leisure where they will have the opportunity to view paintings in galleries with natural skylights and be free to see works of art chronologically or enter pavilions through the courtyard in any sequence they wish…the choice is up to them. A restaurant, cafeteria, and vendor stands allow guests to either have a leisurely lunch or grab a bite and get back to their art appreciation. Experience a wonderful day of art and culture…all on one hilltop! Cost of Tour: $75.00 pp (advance registration); $90.00 pp (on-site registration) Hosted by Access California. Wednesday, June 15, 2005 Hours: 9:00 AM–3:00 PM Exploring Long Beach Tucked neatly between Los Angeles and Orange County, Long Beach is an easygoing beach city loaded with things to do and see, blessed with a mild climate, lovely oceanfront views, marina settings and major resort amenities. The tour begins by passing through one of the greatest harbors in the world. Traveling high into the hills of San Pedro, guests make their way to the Korean Friendship Bell. The bell rests peacefully on a promontory above the Pacific Ocean in Angels Gate Park, and is a treasured gift in honor of the veterans of the Korean War from the Republic of Korea to the people of Los Angeles. The bell is set in an enchanting pagoda-like stone structure, with unsurpassed views of the Los Angeles harbor, the Catalina Channel, and the sea terraces of San Pedro hill. Your tour continues through historic downtown Long Beach where you will see landmarks such as the First Congregational Church, a magnificent Italian Gothic church with lavish stained glass and decorative detailing. The tour winds through palatial homes on Ocean Avenue and stops at one of the city’s most prized cultural icons. Overlooking Long Beach Harbor and the Cost of Tour: $55.00 pp (advance registration); $65.00 pp (on-site registration) Hosted by Access California. 72 GUEST PROGRAM Pacific Ocean, the Long Beach Museum of Art’s grounds include the beautifully restored 1912 Elizabeth Milbank Anderson craftsman mansion and an exhibition pavilion with two-story atrium and ocean-view gallery. The museum, a designated historic landmark, has undergone a multimillion-dollar expansion and doubled its exhibit space. Its permanent collection spans over 300 years of American and European art, focusing on early 20th-century European painting, California Modernism, American decorative arts, and contemporary media and video art. There is a café at the museum for guests to purchase snacks or lunch if they like. Next you will be strolling the grounds of the serene and beautiful Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden. The Long Beach tour finishes back in Belmont Shores. Long Beach is the last undiscovered city on the West Coast. People are starting to discover it and talk about it. Find out why! Thursday, June 16, 2005 Hours: 9:00 AM–5:00 PM Guests will travel to Catalina Island on the Catalina Express ferry and then take a 50 minute scenic tour of the resort city of Avalon. The tour begins along the island’s only coastline road, climbs to an elevation of 400 feet, passes Mount Ada, the original Wrigley estate, continues through Avalon Canyon, and winds through the city for a majestic view of the harbor and Avalon Casino. Have lunch on your own in one of the city’s centrally located restaurants and then browse through quaint shops and galleries, or visit the Catalina Island Museum in the world-famous Casino Building. Cost of Tour: $65.00 pp (advance registration only) Hosted by the Steering Committee. Friday June 17, 2005 Hours: 7:30 AM–1:30 PM Golf Outing Only six miles from the Long Beach Convention Center lies the Cal Olson designed Skylinks golf course. After many months and over $6 M in renovations the course was re-opened in November 2004. Totally re-seeded Bermuda fairways, Pao Annua/ bent grass greens, 4 lakes and 80 bunkers; enough to last any kitty a lifetime. Home of the Queen Mary Open this course can be a challenge even for the pro. Plenty of shade and pine trees enhance the fairways and greens offering lots of shade to golfers and errant golf balls. This 6372 yard, par 72 is the perfect dessert to finish off a week of technical papers and workshops. Leave the transmission lines, Fourier Transforms and radar equations at the hotel room. Bring your sticks and take some time to enjoy driving your favorite golf ball down these beautiful fairways. And even better yet, if you are leaving via the Long Beach Airport, it’s just across the street. This is a four person scramble. Players can sign up as a group or be assigned a team. A morning shotgun start ensures a timely finish for all and a chance to sit down to a great lunch with teammates and challengers to discuss Newton’s selective laws of gravity and numerous other reasons why the putts didn’t drop. Lunch and prizes are all included in the fee along with free range balls to warm up in the morning. Don’t be left out. This program is on a first-come, first-served basis to the first 40 registrants. Metal spikes are not allowed. Cost of Tour: $50.00 pp (advance registration); $60.00 pp (on-site registration) Hosted by Access California. Thursday, June 16, 2005 Hours: 9:00 AM–3:00 PM Catalina Island Trip Long Beach Multi-Cultural Tour The tour begins “Italian Style” at Naples Island where guests board gondolas. There, able-bodied gondoliers, in the traditional Venetian straw hats and striped shirts, ply the waterways and canals. Your guests will enjoy the Italian romantic spirit as they relax and enjoy the sights and sounds of life on the water. Nearby, Belmont Shores Shopping District is filled with boutique shops and international cares for a perfect lunchtime exploration The tour then makes its way to the now burgeoning East Village Arts District. Touted as the only institution in the western US devoted exclusively to contemporary Latin American art, the Museum of Latin American Art has a principal interest in representational pieces that reflect Latin American culture, traditions and rituals. The museum opened in 1996, and occupies a building dating to the late 1920s that was occupied by the Balboa Amusement Producing Company, one of the world’s most prolific silent film studios. Cost of Tour: $60.00 pp (advance registration); $70.00 pp (on-site registration) Hosted by Access California. Cost of Tour: $70.00 pp (advance registration only) (includes green fee, cart, range balls, lunch and prizes) Hosted by the Steering Committee. 73 Long Beach Convention Center MEETING ROOM 101A MEETING ROOM 101B MEETING ROOM 102A MEETING ROOM 102B MEETING ROOM 102C W M MEETING ROOM 103A MEETING ROOM 103B FIRST FLOOR MEETING ROOMS MEETING ROOM 103C VIP LOBBY M W RE GI ST RA TI ON CAFE 74 Long Beach Convention Center MEETING ROOM 201A MEETING ROOM 201B MEETING ROOM 202A MEETING ROOM 202B MEETING ROOM 202C W MEETING ROOM 203A MEETING ROOM 203B SECOND FLOOR MEETING ROOMS OPEN TO BELOW MEETING ROOM 203C STAIR NO. 3 MEETING ROOM 204 STAIR NO. 5 M W BALLROOM PREFUNCTION STAGING PANTRY STAIR NO. 4 BALLROOM MAIN KITCHEN 75 2005 RFIC TECHNICAL PROGRAM — TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005 RTU1A Low Power Wireless Data Systems — LBCC 101 Chair: S. Lloyd, Beceem Communications Inc. • Co-chair: G. Chang, MaxLinear 8:00 AM: RTU1A-1: Invited: Challenges in the Design of CMOS Transceivers for the IEEE 802.11 Wireless LANs: Past, Present and Future M. Zargari, S. Mehta, D. Su, Atheros Communications 8:20 AM: RTU1A-2: Invited: Low Power RF Design for Sensor Networks B.W. Cook, A. Molnar, K.S.J. Pister, University of California-Berkeley 8:40 AM: RTU1A-3: A Long-Range RFID IC with On-chip ADC in 0.25 µm CMOS F. Kocer, M.P. Flynn, Wireless Integrated Microsystems Engineering Research Center (WIMS-ERC) , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 9:00 AM: RTU1A-4: A CMOS 2.45 GHz Radio Frequency Identification Tag IC with Read/Write Memory W.G. Yeoh, Y.B. Choi, K.Y. Tham, Institute of Microelectronics; S.X. Diao, Y.S. Li, Toppan Electronics Co.,(S) Pte. Ltd. 9:20 AM: RTU1A-5: Invited: A Fully Integrated SOC for 802.11b in 0.18 µm CMOS H. Darabi S. Khorram Z. Zhou. T. Li, B. Marholev, J. Chiu, J. Castaneda, E. Chien, S. Anand, S. Wu, M. Pan, R. Rofougaran, H. Kim, P. Lettieri, B. Ibrahim, J. Rael, L. Tran, E. Geronaga, H. Yeh T, Frost J. Trachewsky, A. Rofougaran, Broadcom Corp. RTU1B Advanced RFIC Device Technology — LBCC 102A/B Chair: E. Reese, TriQuint Semiconductor Co-chair: M. Kumar, Lockheed Martin 8:00 AM: RTU1B-1: High Power Density InGaP PHEMTs for 26 V Operation E. Lan, B.M. Green, P. Li, O. Hartin, P. Fisher, D. Maurer, P.M. Piel, B. Knappenberger, M.Cde. Baca, M. Miller, C.E. Weitzel, Freescale Semiconductor Inc. 8:20 AM: RTU1B-2: RF MEMS: Status of the Industry and Roadmaps J. Bouchaud, H. Wicht, WTC-Wicht Technologie Consulting 8:40 AM: RTU1B-3: A Novel RF High-Q Metal-semiconductor-metal Planar Inter-digitated Varactor Based on Double-channel AlGaN/GaN HEMT Structure C.S. Chu, Y.G. Zhou, K.J. Chen, K.M. Lau, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology 9:00 AM: RTU1B-4: Low-distortion, Low-loss Varactor-based Adaptive Matching Networks, Implemented in a Silicon-on-Glass Technology K. Buisman, L.C.N. de Vreede, M. Spirito, A. Akhnoukh, Y. Lin, X. Liu, L.K. Nanver, DIMES, Delft University of Technology; L.E. Larson, University of California, San Diego, Center for Wireless Communications RTU1C CMOS VCOs — LBCC 102C Chair: S. Dow, ON Semiconductor Co-chair: D. Nobbe, Peregrine Semiconductor 8:00 AM: RTU1C-1: Invited: Designing an Ultra Low Phase Noise 4.5 GHz VCO Using Multiple Coupled Resonators and MOS Devices U.L. Rohde, Synergy Microwave Corp. Inc. 8:20 AM: RTU1C-2: RF CMOS Differential Oscillator with Source Damping Resistors C-Y. Cha, H-C. Choi, H-T. Kim, S-G. Lee, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, Samsung Electronics, Information and Communications University 8:40 AM: RTU1C-3: Phase Noise Optimization of CMOS VCO through Harmonic Tuning S. Ryu, H. Kim, J. Choi, B. Kim, Pohang University of Science and Technology; Y. Chung, Samsung Electronics 9:00 AM: RTU1C-4: Noise Contributors in a Low Power VCO with Automatic Amplitude Control R. Murji, J. M. Deen, McMaster University 9:20 AM: RTU1C-5: A 9.953/10.7/12.5 GHz 0.13 µm CMOS LC Oscillator Using Capacitor Calibration and a VGS/R Based Low Noise Regulator A. Maxim, D. Lazlo, Integrated Products, Fiber Communications Div. RTU1D Switching Class Power Amplifiers — LBCC 103A/B Chair: F. van Straten, Philips Semiconductors Co-chair: B. Thompson, Motorola Labs 8:00 AM: RTU1D-1: Invited: Next Generation Power Ampllifiers for Wireless Communications - Squeezing More Bits from Fewer Joules L.E. Larson, P.A. Asbeck, D. Kimball, University of California, San Diego 8:20 AM: RTU1D-2: GaAs HBT Class-E Amplifiers for 2 GHz Mobile Applications E.A. Jarvinen, M.J. Alanen, Nokia Technology Platforms 8:40 AM: RTU1D-3: A 1.4-2 GHz Wideband CMOS Class-E Power Amplifier Delivering 23 dBm Peak with 67% PAE A. Mazzanti, DII University of Modena and –Reggio Emilia; L. Larcher, R. Brama, DISMI University of Modena and Reggio Emilia; F. Svelto, DIE University of Pavia 9:00 AM: RTU1D-4: Class E Amplifier with Inductive Clamp Circuit A. Eroglu, D. Lincoln, MKS ENI Products 9:20 AM: RTU1D-5: An Adaptive Protection Circuit for Power Amplifier Ruggedness Improvement P. Riondet, Freescale Semiconductors; T. Parra, G. Montoriol, LAAS-CNRS; W. Karoui, Freescale Semiconductors/LAAS-CNRS RTU3A RF High Power Circuit Blocks — LBCC 101 Chair: D. Ngo, RF Micro Devices Inc Co-chair: N. Suematsu, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. 1:20 PM: RTU3A-1: Invited: Fully Integrated CMOS RF Power Amplifiers - A Prelude to Full Radio Integration A. Hajimiri, California Institute of Technology 1:40 PM: RTU3A-2: Differential CMOS Linear Power Amplifier with Second Harmonic Termination at Common Source Node J. Kang, B. Kim, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea; Y. Chung, S. Hwang, MagnaChip Semiconductor Ltd., Korea 2:00 PM: RTU3A-3: On the Optimum Second Harmonic Source and Load Impedances for the Efficiency-linearity Trade-off of LDMOS Power Amplifiers D.M.H. Hartskeerl, I. Volokhine, Philips Research Labs; M. Spirito, HiTEC Lab, Delft University of Technology 2:20 PM: RTU3A-4: A Miniature Low-insertion-loss, High-power CMOS SPDT Switch Using Floating-body Technique for 2.4 and 5.8 GHz Applications M-C. Yeh, R-C. Liu, Z-M. Tsai, H. Wang, National Taiwan University 2:30 PM: RTU3A-5: An Ultra-low Distortion 3P2T Antenna Switch MMIC for Dual-band WCDMA Applications E. Yasuda, K. Hidaka, T. Nakatsuka, A. Watanabe, K. Tara, RF-Semiconductor Development Center, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd. RTU3B Frequency Gen. Circuits II: New Concepts and Building Blocks — LBCC 102A/B Chair: S. Raman, Virginia Tech • Co-chair: H. Wang, National Taiwan University 1:20 PM: RTU3B-1: A 40 GHz 2.1 V Static Frequency Divider in SiGe Using a Low Voltage Latch Topology D. Kucharski, K.T. Kornegay, Cornell University 1:40 PM: RTU3B-2: A Low Power 17 GHz 256/257 Dual-modulus Prescaler Fabricated in a 130 nm CMOS Process Y. Ding, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Florida 2:00 PM: RTU3B-3: Variable Division Ratio of a 20 GHz CMOS Injection-locked Frequency Divider F.H. Huang, D.M. Lin, H.P. Wang, W.Y. Chiu, Y.J. Chan, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, National Central University 2:20 PM: RTU3B-4: Time-to-digital Converter for RF Frequency Synthesis in 90 nm CMOS R.B. Staszewski, S. Vemulapalli, P. Vallur, J. Wallberg, P.T. Balsara, Wireless Analog Technology Center, Texas Instruments Inc., Center for Integrated Circuits and Systems, Univ. of Texas at Dallas 2:40 PM: RTU3B-5: Toward Wireless Receivers Without Crystals F.L. Martin, P. Gorday, D. Taubenheim, Motorola Labs RTU3C RF Trends — LBCC 102C Chair: S. Heinen, RWTH Aachen University • Co-chair: L. Boglione, Filtronics 1:20 PM: RTU3C-1: Invited: Multi-mode, Multi-band RF Transceiver Circuits for Mobile Terminals in Deep-submicron CMOS Processes B. Bakkaloglu, P.A. Fontaine, Texas Instruments Inc. 1:40 PM: RTU3C-2: A Direct Up-conversion Transmitter with Integrated Prescaler for Reconfigurable Multi-band/Multi-standard J. Platz, G. Strasser, LCM Linz Center of Mechatronics GmbH; K. Feilkas, Infineon Technologies AG; L. Maurer, DICE Danube Integrated Circuits Engineering; A. Springer, Inst. for Com. and Inf. Eng. University/LCM Linz Center of Mechatronics GmbH 2:00 PM: RTU3C-3: Multiband Multi-standard Transmitter Using a Compact Power Amplifier Driver H. Magnusson, H. Olsson, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) 2:20 PM: RTU3C-4: Temperature Effect on the Performance of a Traveling Wave Amplifier in 130 nm SOI Technology M. Si Moussa, J.-P. Raskin, EMIC – UCL Belgium; D. Vanhoenacker-Janvier, F. Danneville, IEMN – France; J. Russat, N. Fel, CEA – France; C. Pavageau, IEMN – France/CEA – France RTU3D Receiver Circuits — LBCC 103A/B Chair: R. Kagiwada, Northrop Grumman • Co-chair: T. Nakagawa, NTT 1:20 PM: RTU3D-1: Invited: Low Voltage Techniques for Sub 100 nm CMOS, RF Transceivers K. Soumyanath, Intel Corp. 1:40 PM: RTU3D-2: A 2 GHz Band Self Frequency Dividing Quadrature Mixer E. Taniguchi, C. Kageyama, N. Suematsu, Information Technology R&D Center, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. 2:00 PM: RTU3D-3: An Antenna Switch MMIC for GSM/UMTS Handsets Using E/D-Mode JPHEMT Technology K. Kohama, M. Nakamura, K. Onodera, S. Wada, S. Tamari, Y. Mizunuma, Sony Corp. Semiconductor Solutions Network Co. 2:20 PM: RTU3D-4: Resistive Mixers for Reconfigurable Wireless Front-ends R. Circa, D. Pienkowski, G. Boeck, Technische Universitat Berlin, Microwave Engineering Group; R. Kakerow, M. Mueller, R. Wittmann, Nokia Research Center 2:40 PM: RTU3D-5: A 45° CMOS Phase Shifter and Gain/Phase Imbalance Compensation for Multi-band Transceivers T. Nakagawa, M. Kawashima, M. Matsui, K. Araki, NTT Network Innovation Labs, NTT Corp. 76 2005 RFIC TECHNICAL PROGRAM — TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2005 RTU4A Silicon Integrated VCOs — LBCC 101 Chair: T-P. Liu, Winbond Electronics • Co-chair: Y. Deval, IXL Lab 3:30 PM: RTU4A-1: The Effect of Substrate Noise on VCO Performance N. Checka, D. Wentzloff, A. Chandrakasan, R. Reif, Microsystems Technology Labs, MIT 3:50 PM: RTU4A-2: Design and Optimization of a Linear Wide-band VCO for Multimode Applications A. Koukab, Y. Lei, M. Declercq, Ecole Polytechnique Fédéral de Lausanne (EPFL) Laboratoire d’Electronique Générale (LEG-IMM) 4:10 PM: RTU4A-3: I/Q LC Oscillators with an Octave Tuning Range for TV on Mobile Platforms J. van der Tang, A. van Roermund, Eindhoven University of Technology; R. Amiot, H. Rumpt, D. Kasperkovitz, Semiconductor Ideas to the Market (ItoM) 4:30 PM: RTU4A-4: Design of Quadrature CMOS VCO Using Source Degeneration Resistor S-M. Moon, M-Q. Lee, University of Seoul; B-S. Kim, Sungkyunkwan University 4:50 PM: RTU4A-5: A Low-phase-noise Wide-band CMOS Quadratuer VCO for Multi-standard RF Front-ends A. Fard, P. Andreani, M‰lardalen University, Dept. of Electronics, Technical University of Denmark, Center for Physical Electronics RTUIFR Interactive Forum — LBCC Grand Ballroom — 1:30 PM Chair: F. von Straten, Philips Semiconductor Co-chair: A. Hanke, Infineon Technologies RTUIFR-01: A 3–10 GHz SiGe Resistive Feedback Low Noise Amplifier for UWB Applications J. Lee, J.D. Cressler, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology RTUIFR-02: Consideration of Age Degradation in the RF Performance of CMOS Radio Chips for High Volume Manufacturing M. Ruberto, T. Maimon, Y. Shemesh, Wireless Products Div., Intel Corp.; A.B. Desormeaux, Cadence Design Systems SAS; W. Zhang, C. Yeh, Cadence Design Systems Inc. RTUIFR-03: Modeling of Broadband Noise in Complementary (npn + pnp) SiGe HBTs B. Banerjee, S. Venkataraman, E. Zhao, C.-H. Lee, J.D. Cressler, J. Laskar, Georgia Institute of Technology; B.E. Kareh, S. Balster, H. Yasuda, Texas Instruments RTUIFR-04: Fully Integrated Fractional PLL for Bluetooth Application M. Marletta, P. Aliberti, M. Pulvirenti, A. Cavallaro, S. Terryn, P. Filoramo, R. Iardino, V. Spalma, S. Cosentino, STMicroelectronics RTUIFR-05: On-wafer Characterization De-embedding and Transmission Line Optimization on Silicon for Millimeter-wave Applications S.K. Rockwell, B.A. Bosco, Motorola Labs RTUIFR-06: A Compact Low Noise Amplifier in SiGe:C BiCMOS Technology for 40GHz Wireless Communications I. Telliez, A. Chantre, P. Chevalier, STMicroelectronics; F. Danneville, G. Dambrine, S. Lepilliet, IEMN; S. Pruvost, STMicroelectronics/IEMN RTUIFR-07: Integrated Differential 2 GHz 2.7 V Low-noise Active Bandpass Filters on Silicon Z. Sassi, S. Darfeuille, B. Barelaud, L. Billonnet, B. Jarry, IRCOM,University of Limoges; H. Marie, N.T. Luan Le, P. Gamand, Innovation Centre RF, Philips Semiconductors. RTUIFR-08: A Multi-phase 10 GHz VCO in CMOS/SOI for 40 Gbits/s SONET OC-768 Clock and Data Recovery Circuits D. Axelrad, E. de Foucauld, M. Boasis, P. Martin, P. Vincent, M. Belleville, CEA-LETI; F. Gaffiot, LEOM/Ecole Centrale de Lyon RTUIFR-09: Highly Linear, Varactor-less, 24 GHz IQ Oscillator M.A. Sanduleanu, E. Stikvoort, Philips Research Eindhoven RTUIFR-10: A Multi-standard Adaptive Image-reject Downconverter A. Tasic, S-T. Lim, W.A. Serdijn, J.R. Long, Electronics Research Laboratory/DIMES, Delft University of Technology RTUIFR-11: High Frequency Noise Optimization of Sub-100 nm MOSFETs Utilizing Three Dimensional TCAD Simulation T. Tatsumi, Sony Corp. RTUIFR-12: Low Frequency Spurs of VCO Due to Noise Propagation from Digital I/Os and Their Effects on Performance of Bluetooth SoC S. Kousai, K. Agawa, H. Ishikuro, H. Majima, H. Kobayashi, D. Miyashita, T. Yoshino, Y. Hama, M. Hamada, SoC Research and Development Center, Toshiba Corp. RTUIFR-13: A Broadband and Scalable Model for On-chip Inductors Incorporating Substrate and Conductor Loss Effects J.C. Guo, T.Y. Tan, Dept. of Electronics Engineering, National Chiao Tung Univ. RTUIFR-14: The Transformer Characteristic Resistance and Its Application to the Performance Analysis of Silicon Integrated Transformers E. Ragonese, F. Carrara, A. Italia, A. Scuderi, G. Palmisano, Universite di Catania -– Facolte di Ingegneria – DIEES; T. Biondi, STMicroelectronics RTUIFR-15: CDMA2000 PCS/Cell SiGe HBT Load Insensitive Power Amplifiers G. Berretta, D. Cristaudo, S. Scaccianoce, STMicroelectronics RTUIFR-16: An ESD protected RFIC Power Amplifier Design S. Muthukrishnan, S. Raman, Wireless Microsystems Lab, Bradley Dept. of ECE, Virginia Tech; J. Zhao, G. Studtmann, M/A-COM, Integrated Products Business Unit RTUIFR-17: High-linearity and Temperature-insensitive 2.4 GHz SiGe Power Amplifier with Dynamic-bias Control W.C. Hua, H.H. Lai, P.T. Lin, C.W. Liu, Dept of Elect Eng and Graduate Institute of Electronics Engineering, National Taiwan University; T.Y. Yang, G.K. Ma, SoC Technology Center, ITRI RTUIFR-18: A 131 GHz Push-push VCO in 90 nm CMOS Technology P-C. Huang, R-C. Liu, H-Y. Chang, C-S. Lin, M-F. Lei, H. Wang, National Taiwan University; CY. Su, C-L. Chang, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. RTUIFR-19: A New Kind of CMOS High Frequency Oscillators R. Kielbasa, Supeélec, Gif-sur-Yvette; V. Petit, Thales Airborne Systems; G. Petit, Supeélec, Gif-sur-Yvette/Thales Airborne Systems RTUIFR-20: An integrated 1.5 V 6 GHz Q-enhanced LC CMOS Filter with Automatic Quality Factor Tuning Using Conductance Reference S. Li, N. Stanic, Y. Tsividis, Columbia University; K. Soumyanath, Intel Corp. RTUIFR-21: A 1.25 Gbps Burst-mode Receiver IC with Extended Dynamic Range C.C. Chen, C.M. Tsai, D.U. Li, L.R. Huang, SoC Technology Center, Industrial Technology Research Institute RTUIFR-22: A Low Power SiGe HBT Merged LNA and Mixer for 5 GHz Wireless LAN Receivers C. Carta, W. Baechtold, Electromagnetic Fields and Microwave Electronics Lab, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology RTUIFR-23: A 40 dBm OIP3, 2 GHz Silicon Bipolar LNA C. Motta, G. Girlando, A. Castorina, STMicroelectronics; G. Palmisano, University of Catania RTUIFR-24: Analytical Thermal Noise Model Suitable for Circuit Design Using Short Channel MOSFETs J.W. Jeon, S. Kim, I.M. Kang, K. Han, H. Shin, Seoul National University RTUIFR-25: A Multiphase Phase/Frequency Detector-based Frequency Synthesizer V. Lagareste, F. Badets, D. Belot, STMicroelectronics, DAIS, Central R&D; Y. Deval, J.B. Begueret, IXL Lab, University Bordeaux RTUIFR-26: Integrated 2.4 GHz Class-E CMOS Power Amplifier V. Saari, P. Juurakko, J. Ryyn‰nen, K. Halonen, Helsinki University of Technology, Electronic Circuit Design Lab RTUIFR-27: A Low Phase Noise Quadrature LC VCO in CMOS Technology B. Sze, C. Ho, VIA Technologies Inc. RTUIFR-28: Non-intrusive Testing Methodology for CMOS RF LNAs J. Liobe, Y. Xiang, M. Margala, University of Rochester RTUIFR-29: A Circuit Sensitive Methodology for Evaluating Substrate Noise J. Liobe, K. Jenkins, University of Rochester and IBM RTUIFR-30: A 2.4 GHz ISM Transmitter IC with Novel Quadrature Clock Generation Technique for a Localization Application G. Popken, M. Hartmann, H. Milosiu, H. Neubauer, F. Oehler, M. Peter, Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits; P. Baureis, University of Applied Sciences Worzburg-Schweinfurt RTUIFR-31: A 2.5 GHz Constant Envelope Phase shift Modulator for Low Power Wireless Applications X. Yang, C. Cao, J. Lin, K.K. O, J. Brewer, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Florida RTUIFR-32: Fifth-derivative Gaussian Pulse Generator for UWB System H. Kim, Y. Joo, Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University RTUIFR-33: Dynamic Output Phase to Adaptively Improve the Linearity of Power Amplifier Under Antenna Mismatch A. Keerti, A. Pham, Microwave Microsystems Lab, University of California RTUIFR-34: A Fully Integrated Low Power Direct Conversion Transmitter with Fractional-N PLL Using a Fast AFC Technique for CDMA Applications J.C. Lee, S.H. Beck, S. Yoo, K.H Lim, H.S. Jung, T.H. Lee, K.L. Kim, S. Han, Future Communications IC (FCI) Inc.; G.H. Cho, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST); M.W. Hwang, Future Communications IC (FCI) Inc./Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) RTUIFR-35: A Low Voltage, Low Power, High dB Linear and All CMOS Exponential V-I Conversion Circuit Q-H. Duong, S-G. Lee, RFME Lab, Information and Communications University RTUIFR-36: CMOS Circular Geometry VCOs for Microwave Magnetic Field Generation T. Yalcin, G. Boero, R.S. Popovic, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne; V. Sahin, Decicon Inc. RTUIFR-37: 1.8 V, Variable Gain Transimpedance Amplifiers with Constant Damping Factor for Burst-Mode Optical Receiver W-Z. Chen, Dept. of Electronics Engineering, National Chiao-Tung University; R-M. Gan, STC, Industrial Technology Research Institute RTUIFR-38: Design of CMOS Distributed Circuits for Multiband UWB Wireless Receivers P. Heydari, D. Lin, A. Shameli, A. Yazdi, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California Cover Photos: Destinations Long Beach Magazine IEEE MTT-S INTERNATIONAL MICROWAVE SYMPOSIUM program guide FIRST CLASS US POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 490 LIBERTY, MO
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