News

Keep posted on what our department and its members are accomplishing on a daily basis.

Simulation Highlights Potential For Low-Cost Security Imaging Device

Posted on September 8, 2016 | Filed Under: News and Research

Researchers from North Carolina State University have used computer models to demonstrate the viability of a low-cost security imaging device that makes use of inexpensive radio components. Functional prototypes are under development and wo …

Researchers Use Hardware to Accelerate Core-to-Core On-Chip Communication

Posted on September 6, 2016 | Filed Under: News

Researchers from North Carolina State University and the Intel Corporation have developed a new way to significantly accelerate core-to-core communication. Their advance relies on hardware to coordinate efforts between cores for multiproces …

ECE Welcomes New Faculty

Posted on September 2, 2016 | Filed Under: Faculty and News

NC State ECE is proud announce the addition of five members to the faculty. A variety of scholars from all over the country, and various parts of the world, having joined the Wolfpack to lend their experience and expertise to our students a …

Faculty-2-Faculty Mentor Awards

Posted on August 23, 2016 | Filed Under: Faculty

Thirty-one College faculty members were recognized for their outstanding mentorship at the spring faculty meeting. To honor their accomplishments, each individual became recipients of the inaugural Faculty-2-Faculty Mentor Recognition. Of t …

Professorships created in ECE as investment

Posted on August 23, 2016 | Filed Under: Faculty

Cirrus Logic, a premier supplier of high performance, low-power integrated circuits (IC) for audio and voice signal processing applications, recruits and hires more graduates of NC State than any other school. ECE alumnus Dr. Jason Rhode, p …

Bozkurt Receives IEEE Young Professional Award

Posted on August 22, 2016 | Filed Under: Awards and News

This past week, IEEE has awarded Dr. Alper Bozkurt with the 2016 IEEE Sensors Council Young Professional Award for his outstanding research, teaching, and outreach performance. Annually, the IEEE Sensors Council Young Professional Award is …

Successful Inaugural 3D-PEIM Symposium

Posted on August 22, 2016 | Filed Under: Events and News

A true success – on June 13-15, 2016, over 80 participants, 11 from outside the US, attended the 1st International Symposium on 3D Power Electronics Integration and Manufacturing (www.3D-PEIM.org) in Raleigh, North Carolina. The symposium o …

NC State forms NSF-Funded Center for Advanced Electronics Through Machine Learning With UIUC and Georgia Tech

Posted on August 2, 2016 | Filed Under: News and Research and Smart

North Carolina State University, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Georgia Tech are forming a center that aims to speed up design and verification of microelectronic circuits and systems, reducing development costs and time …

NC State Engineering Graduate Programs earns top ranking

Posted on July 29, 2016 | Filed Under: News and Programs

The Graduate Program in NC State University’s College of Engineering ranks among the nation’s top 25 graduate engineering programs by GraduatePrograms.com, a product of SR Education Group. The website’s 2016 rankings put the College’s gradu …

Researchers Devise Tool to Improve Imaging of Neuronal Activity in the Brain

Posted on July 21, 2016 | Filed Under: Life and News and Research

In a partnership melding neuroscience and electrical engineering, researchers from UNC-Chapel Hill and NC State University have developed a new technology that will allow neuroscientists to capture images of the brain almost 10 times larger …

CBS 17: NC State receives funding for semiconductor electronics research

RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — NC State University is getting new funding from the White House and Department of Defense to further semiconductor electronics research.

Thursday the White House Science and Technology Director, Department of Defense and others gathered at NC State’s Alumni Center to announce $19 million in funding four additional projects for the Commercial Leap Ahead for Wide Bandgap Semiconductors (CLAWS) Microelectronics Hub.

The projects were selected from more than 100 proposals and aim to improve the performance of transistors and switches used in important civilian and military technologies, as well as to increase U.S. economic competitiveness and national security with translational pathways to commercialization.

The hub is one of eight established by the Biden Administration’s Chips and Science Act.

“Wide bandgap semiconductors have been invented here in North Carolina. You see that in companies like Wolfspeed, Kyma Technologies, Adroit Materials so it’s got a great base and great start to do interesting technologies,” said John Muth, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at NC State.

The goal of the Chips and Science Act is to increase production and manufacturing of advanced semiconductors here in the United States.  Currently Taiwan tops the list as the largest producer of advanced semiconductors.

“Right here at NC State, with this work that they’re doing, a particular class of wide band gap semi-conductors, these are the devices that we need for advanced radar and power electronics. Our military needs them but we need them for our clean energy future as well and this area’s got just such a tremendous track record in this technology…this is about the next generation,” said Arati Prabhakar, White House Science and Technology Director.

The White House says the U.S. produces only about 10% of the global supply of semi-conductor chips. They hope with programs like these they can increase production over the next decade. You can learn more about the “Leap Ahead” projects here.

Posted on September 19, 2024

ABC 11: CLAWS Hub at NC State receives $19 million from CHIPS and Science Act

RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — Federal officials gathered Thursday at the Park Alumni Center on NC State University’s campus to announce $19 million in federal funding for the CLAWS Hub toward work on semiconductors.

CLAWS, an acronym for Commercial Leap Ahead for Wide Bandgap Semiconductors, is based at NC State and is comprised of NC State, North Carolina A&T State University and six private companies.

“(NC State has) for a long time been a particular leader in these specialty semiconductors that are so important in our military for radar and for power electronics,” said Dr. Arati Prabhakar, President Joe Biden’s Chief Advisor for Science and Technology.

Semiconductors are used in nearly all forms of modern technology, including in cell phones, refrigerators, data centers and military capabilities.

“If you look at emerging technologies like artificial intelligence that are going to require power, you need to be able to get that power there efficiently. If you look at technologies like quantum, you need to have new lasers, new photonic integrated circuits that will be able to make the next generation of quantum computers,” said Dr. John Muth, Director of the CLAWS Hub.

Taiwan is responsible for the overwhelming majority of chip production globally, a point that has concerned US officials from a national security perspective.

“If you look at weapons systems or if you look at airplanes, they need to be able to fly faster. They need to be able to be lighter. They need to be able to have radars that can sense the enemy further away,” said Muth.

“Increased funding has been a game-changer,” Prabhakar said.

“At the time the CHIPS and Science Act passed, the United States had 0% of the global capacity to manufacture advanced logic. And a decade from then, in 2032, because of the CHIPS and Science Act and this huge private capital that it’s bringing with it, we’re going to go from 0% to 28%,” said Prabhakar.

Muth said all four projects will take multiple years, with the total funding set to exceed the $19 million announced Thursday,

“I want to take my experience and academia and from the support that we’re given and push it in the industry. And I hope it gives me a great leap forward,” said Jacob Davis, an NC State Master’s student.

Dan Rogers, an NC State PhD student, added, “I think it’s a really great opportunity to kind of leverage for employers and for future employment opportunities to be able to say that you worked on some of these different innovations.”

Posted on September 19, 2024

Christina Koch is headed to the moon, exactly like she dreamed she would

In 2025, she will be one of four astronauts who will head to the moon as a part of Artemis II. The North Carolina State University graduate stopped by the WUNC studio during a recent visit back to the Tar Heel State.

Posted on May 9, 2024

Injectable Microchip Tracks Animal Health

Around the world, many pets and working animals are microchipped. It’s a simple process: A tiny transponder with an identification number is enclosed in a rice-grain-sized cylinder and injected under the skin, so that if an animal is lost it can be identified. This new devices does more, including tracking and reporting heart rate, breathing, movement, and temperature sensing in a 4-mm-wide package.

Posted on March 12, 2024

NC State innovation on display at CES 2024 in Las Vegas

North Carolina’s innovation is on display internationally, including work coming out of the ASSIST Center featured at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Posted on January 11, 2024

Stress Monitors for Plants Can Spot Dehydration

In a forthcoming paper to be published in IEEE Transactions on AgriFood Electronics(TAFE), James Reynolds, a postdoctoral research scholar at NC State’s iBionicS Lab and first author of the paper, and fellow researchers at North Carolina State University explored how plant tissue’s impeding of electrical current can be monitored to identify plants under stress with relative immediacy—less than an hour, in some cases.

Posted on December 11, 2023