|
The purpose
of the Student Design Contest is to promote excellence in
the design of electronic systems by providing competition
between graduate and undergraduate students at universities
and colleges.
39th DESIGN CONTEST WINNERS
OPERATIONAL CATEGORY
1st Place $4,000
(session 41.1) AUnlocking the Design Secrets
of a 2.29 Gb/s Rijndael Processor
Patrick R. Schaumont, Ingrid M. Verbauwhede, Henry Kuo - University
of California, Los Angeles, CA
2nd Place $2,500
System Design of iBadge for Smart Kindergarten
Ivo Locher, Sung I. Park, Andreas Savvides, Mani Srivastava
- Univ. of California, Los Angeles, CA
3rd Place (tie) $1,500
A Low Noise Switched-Capacitor Interface Electronics
for Sub-micro Gravity Resolution Micromachined Accelerometers
Haluk Kulah - Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
3rd Place (tie) $1,500
Low-Jitter Power-Aware Non-PLL Clock Generator
for GHz Microprocessors
Chulwoo Kim, Inchul Hwang - Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL
Sung Mo Kang - Univ. of California, Santa Cruz, CA
CONCEPTUAL CATEGORY
1st Place $4,000, SDC
Best Paper $1000
A Microsystem for Near-Patient Accelerated
Clotting Time Blood Tests
Steven M. Martin, Roy H. Olsson, Richard B. Brown - Univ.
of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
2nd Place $2,500
Design of a Crossbar Switch Chip for Use in
a Demonstration System of an Optoelectronic Multi-Chip Module
Jason D. Bakos, Donald M. Chiarulli - Univ. of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, PA
3rd Place $1,500
Highly Parallel DNA Sequence Matching and
Alignment Processor
A. T. Patzer - Duke Univ., Durham, NC
HONORABLE MENTIONS $500
A Low-Power Line Driver Using Resonant Charging
With Reduced High-Order Frequency Components
Clemens Schlachta, Burkart Voss, Manfred Glesner - Darmstadt
Univ., Darmstadt, Germany
(session 29.4) Systematic Design of a 200
Ms/s 8-bit Interpolating/Averaging A/D Converter
Jan Vandenbussche - Katholieke Univ., Leuven, Belgium
Power Minimization for Digital Optical Interconnects
Xiaoqing Wang, Fouad Kiamilev, Jeremy Ekman - Univ. of Delaware,
Newark, DE
|
38th DAC Winners
(includes students from ten different universities from
around the world)
|
The contest will allow entries
of both integrated circuits and electronic systems (board-level
design). It will have two categories: 'Operational' and 'Conceptual'.
Operational
designs will have been implemented and tested. Proof of
implementation in the form of die- or board-photographs and
measurement data must be supplied.
Conceptual designs need not have been implemented but must have
been thoroughly simulated and must include a test plan.
CRITERIA FOR ENTERING THE CONTEST
Submissions are invited from full-time
graduate and undergraduate students. The design must have
taken place as part of the students' course or research work
at the university and must have been completed within 18 months
prior to the submission deadline.
Submissions are made electronically
via the DAC web site. Submissions include two files. The first
is the title and a 60-word abstract. The second is a document
describing the design not exceeding 6000 words, with a recommended
length of 4000 words. The deadline for submission is December
7, 2002.
It is appropriate for a professor
to be included as a co-author if he/she was instrumental in
the student(s) approach to the design, or provided other guidance
that contributed to the success of the design.
Submissions are judged by a panel
of experts including members of the DAC Technical Program
Committee and other representatives from the industry. Judging
criteria includes originality, soundness of engineering, measured
performance and the quality of the written submission. Winners
will be notified in mid-February.
|