Title: Department of Electrical Engineering University of Hawaii Anthony Kuh
1Department of Electrical EngineeringUniversity
of HawaiiAnthony Kuh
- Overview of Electrical Engineering Department
- Distance Learning
- HCAC (Overview and Research Activities)
- Digital Military Communications
2Background of EE Department
- Program 40 years old
- Education
- Undergraduate(ABET accredited, breadth, selected
depth, lifelong learning skills). - Graduate (In depth education with research
experience) - Research Broad range of research activities
- Government (more than 5M) NSF, NASA, and
DARPA. - Industry (more than 700K) Boeing, TRW, LSI
Logic, NEC. - Rankings (Gourman report) In early 90s (UG and
grad program 40), 1999 (UG 54). - Awards 5 IEEE Fellows, 7 NSF PYI,NYI, Career
Award winners, 2 University teaching awards.
3 Research Strengths
- Telecommunications (established tradition)
- Networks (ALOHA wireless packet radio networks)
- Communications and coding (Protocols for NASA
and GSM wireless standard) - Signal Processing
- Solid State electronics and devices (outstanding
young talent) - Microwave/Millimeter-wave research lab (MMRL)
- Physical Electronics lab (PEL)
- Integrated Circuits and VLSI Design lab
4 EE Department Overview
- Personnel
- Faculty (25, 17 full time, 4 emeritus, 80 have
been at UH less than 14 years) - Students (270 UG, 85 grad.)
- Areas
- Computers
- Electrophysics
- Systems (Communications)
5Our Vision for the EE Department
- Develop Outstanding UG and Grad. Programs
- Top 25 ranking for both programs.
- Continue to maintain dynamic high quality UG
program. - Cutting edge grad. education and research
program. - Research Excellence
- Targeted areas of research excellence (Hawaii
Center for Advanced Communications (HCAC)). - Promote high technology in Hawaii. (HCAC)
- Increased international recognition and
collaboration with industrial and academic
partners. (HCAC)
6Meeting Objectives
- Recruiting and Retention
- Faculty
- Audra Bullock (lasers).
- Anders Host-Madsen (wireless communications).
- Students (UG and grad.)
- Education
- Quality teaching.
- New paradigms and technology (distance learning).
- HCAC.
- Research (HCAC)
- Advisory Board (Industry and Academia)
- Evaluation of program.
- Fund raising.
7Distance Learning
- Information and Computer Science (ICS) Distance
Learning (Asynchronous Learning Network) - NSF STC (UH and Georgia Tech) distance learning
and telecollaboration - Coop Program (EE and ICS)
- EE Distance Learning (Kauai/ PMRF, industry)
8Mission Statement
The Hawaii Center for Advanced Communications
is a multidisciplinary research center bringing
together researchers from diverse areas to work
together on advanced communication systems
(wireless).
- Joint collaborative basic and applied research
- Members of the Center
- External researchers from government, industry
and academia - Provide students with a rich and diversified
education to prepare them for careers in the
telecommunications industry and academia - Encourage industrial interactions, promotion of
entrepreneurial activities, and providing
technical leadership and expertise to the
University and State of Hawaii
9Center Organization and Development
- Infrastructure
- Research
- Education
- Industry
- Benefits to Hawaii
10Center Organization
Center Industrial Board Local Companies
Mainland Companies Foreign Companies
Hawaii Center for Advanced Communications
Members
J. Chiao S. Lin V. Malhotra G. Sasaki V.
Syrmos G. Uehara J. Yee
Center Council
Executive Board
Director (interim) A. Kuh
M. DeLisio M. Fossorier W. Shiroma
W. Chen (J. Spilker)
11Funding for Center (Partnership)
- State Government
- 5M funding over 5 years to startup Center
- 1st year 1M
- (410K personnel, 300K startup, 90K
retention, 200K equipment) - Industry
- Unrestricted funds through partners program
- Restricted funds
- Federal Government
- Center and group grants from NSF, DOD, NASA
- Individual grants
12Research Overview
Major focus is on high-performance wireless
networks. Transmission technology for networks
are millimeter-wave frequencies (30-300 GHz)
which provides broadband rates up to 5 gigabits
per second.
- Millimeter-wave networks
- Ideal for indoor wireless LANs, line of sight
(LOS) - Shorter wavelengths imply smaller antenna and
circuit dimensions - Broadband applications (interactive multimedia)
- Mobile Wireless Networks
- Network control and management
- Channel and source coding for wireless
communications - Signal processing algorithms
- Applications (broadband access everywhere)
commercial and military
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14Education
- Attract quality students and researchers (reverse
brain drain) - Provide multidisciplinary education to prepare
students for careers in telecommunications - Fundamental and cutting edge classes
- Research instruction and experience
- Information Technology Alliance (Engineering,
Computer Science, Business, Education) - Work to establish educational programs with
industry (life-long learning) - Coop programs (undergraduate and graduate
students) - Distance learning programs
15Industry Relationships
- Funding Levels (Annual Membership Fees)
- Partner level (30,000)
- Affiliate level (15,000)
- Donor level (5,000)
- Industry Donors
- NEC (Masatugu Okada) agreed at partner level.
- Potential local company donors Adtech, STI, GTE
Hawaiian Tel., Oceanic Cable, Orincon. - Potential mainland company donors Boeing, TRW,
LSI Logic, Cisco.
16Center Benefits to the State of Hawaii
A well funded Center with quality personnel will
provide
- a significant boost in federal and industry
funding to the University of Hawaii. - a large increase in students who will be well
prepared for careers in telecommunications. - technical knowledge to the State for development
of a telecommunications industry. - an increase in skilled technical people and high
technology industry that will come to Hawaii. - an increase in the number of high technology
conferences and workshops held in Hawaii.
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18Organization
19Digital Military CommunicationsDeveloping novel
communication networks for future combat systems
- Rapid deployment
- Dynamic network topologies
- Seamless interoperability
- Dynamic bandwidth allocations
- Broadband video applications
- Security
- Mobility
- Power consumption
20Project Description
- Novel Hardware
- Millimeter-wave components, MEMS devices,
quasi-optical components - Secure Communications Systems
- Channel modeling, retrodirective and
reconfigurable arrays, space-time codes - Mobile Wireless Networks
- Ad-hoc network architectures, equalization and
receiver design, multimedia compression
algorithms -
21Impact
- Vertical integration (physical to networking
layer expertise) to design future combat
communication systems - Education of students in multidisciplinary
communication area - Technology transfer, commercialization to help
develop high tech in Hawaii - Visitor exchange program (government, industry,
and other academic institutions)
22Quasi-Optical Power Combining of Microwave and
Millimeter-Wave Solid-State Devices J. Mink, 1986
- High Power-Handling CapabilityPower shared among
many devices. - High Combining EfficiencyFree-space combining
minimizes conductor losses. - Low NoiseNoise from individual elements is
uncorrelated. - Fault TolerantInsensitive to single-point
failures. - InexpensivePlanar structure allows monolithic
integration.
Output Beam
23Retrodirective Self-Oscillating Mixer Array
- Omnidirectional
- Suitable for radar transponders and self-locating
communication networks - Generates jamming signal
24Global Mobile Information Systems(GloMo)
Enable mobile users to automatically form ad hoc
networks and exchange a wide range of voice, data
and multimedia information
- Defense Wireless Environment
- No pre-deployed infrastructure or fixed base
stations - Environment is subject to significant changes
(weather, terrain, foliage, EMI) - Mobile operations
- Significant variation in link quality and
sporadic connectivity
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From DARPA ATO slides