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  PhD in Engineering - Development of multi-physical on-wafer test capabilities for advanced communications and quantum technologies


   College of Science and Engineering

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  Prof Chong Li, Prof M Weides, Prof Nick Ridler  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (UK Students Only)

About the Project

The sixth generation (6G) network that is expected to be commercialised from around 2030 will generate greater diversity and provide technical platforms to solve social, economic and humanity issues with higher data rates (×50 compared to 5G), wider bandwidth (20 GHz) and lower latency (sub-milliseconds). Those requirements push semiconductor devices and IC designs to the limits, and it is beyond Moore’s law. For quantum computers, the sub-1 Kelvin working environment makes conventional CMOS technology “freeze out” and the conventional chip measurement approaches unworkable. In addition, the large number of qubits (e.g. 100 or more) needed to make quantum computing meaningful requires novel characterisation methods. All in all, novel on-chip test capabilities and the measurement technologies for complex waveforms with ultrawide bandwidth operating at room or cryogenic temperature are urgently required and are of national importance. The aim of this project is to establish a world leading multi-physical on-wafer test capability and develop the corresponding measurement techniques for advanced chip-level systems for 6G mobile communications and quantum circuits.

This project is partially funded by the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) and builds upon Glasgow’s recently awarded £2.6M EPSRC Strategic Equipment Grant “TIC6G” (EP/W006448/1) and the previously awarded multiphysical probe station funded by EPSRC’s Early Career Researcher Small Equipment Grant. The candidate student will take full advantage of the aforementioned facilities at Glasgow, along with related facilities and expertise at NPL, to address the challenges that on-chip devices are facing in these applications.

Eligibility: Applicants must have or expect to obtain the equivalent of a 1st or 2.1 degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering or Applied Physics.

How to Apply: Please refer to the following website for details on how to apply:

http://www.gla.ac.uk/research/opportunities/howtoapplyforaresearchdegree/.

Engineering (12) Physics (29)

Funding Notes

Funding is available to cover tuition fees for UK applicants for 3.5 years, as well as paying a stipend at the Research Council rate (£15,609 in 2021). The project will commence on 1 April 2022.