hugo-site/content/about.md

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---
title: "About This Site"
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date: 2022-05-21T19:52:54+02:00
draft: false
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tags:
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- personal
- introduction
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- about
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---
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This site shares a bit of informal documentation and blog-based record keeping
reflecting my day to day activities. Hopefully it's a good mix of technical and
just-for-fun discussion. Professionally I am a mixed-signal circuit designer
which means I compose integrated circuits mostly for sensors whose signals are
then processed for interesting features. Besides my day-to-day job that I enjoy
a bit of casual programming as a hobby which is now predominantly based on
python which makes it easy to adapt or share code.
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Currently my casually programming projects are mainly oriented towards image
processing for object recognition and vectorization techniques. Basically
I am trying to approximate a rasterized images using absolute geometries and
polynomial colour contours such that they have infinite or vector-based precision.
Besides that I self-host a variety of web-services
both as an educational opportunity with the added benefit that I can enjoy more
privacy than the average person. While it is a bit of effort, I feel that this
is an important part of software freedom and lets me avoid malicious services
that I would otherwise be subject to.
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# Research Interests
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I have a strong appreciation for sensing systems and exploring the
More-Than-More scaling for CMOS technology. The idea here is to augment
traditional fabrication techniques for sensing bio-markers, particles, light
and all kinds signals using electronics. More generally however I study analogue
signal processing techniques in the context of all-digital systems. My main
research interests currently are time-domain processing and asynchronous custom
digital logic for high performance applications such as ultra-low-power medical
devices and ultra-wide-band radio transceivers. In these systems we can encode
information using the relative timing of clock edges e.g. pulse-width-modulation
to do analogue processing using digital logic which leads to a new approach to
realizing certain functions and implementations.
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### Time-Domain-Processing
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There are always some surprising consistencies when re-imagining the
representation of information. For example in time-domain systems we can realize
resolve units of time with almost arbitrary precision, very often down to a
KT/C equivalent limit. However some-how similar to traditional analogue systems,
where the maximum dynamic range is limited by the voltage-supply, in
time-domain systems this limit comes from rate at which we can make
observations. For example say we have a 1 MHz pulse-width-encoded signal then
we can only resolve relative timing information at 1 MHz. We could increase
our dynamic range by reducing the pulse-repetition-rate but our information
rate stays constant since we only double the information-per-pulse but half
its rate. Comparing this again to traditional analogue with a simple RC circuit
where our maximum dynamic is set by the supply voltage to KT/C ratio and this
is fixed irrespective of the resistor or bandwidth of the circuit. Again we can
show that this is a fundamental consequence of the
[equi-partition-theorum](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equipartition_theorem)
irrespective of how we represent/encode information.
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The main advantage of time-domain processing is that we can exhaustively use
digital logic. This is not only highly-advantageous when designing in a
deep sub-nanometre technology since they are geared towards these kind of
circuits but also we don't suffer from performance losses due to device parameter
depredation in the same way a traditional op-amp might. In fact you can show
that time-domain circuits can realize almost ideal operators for summation,
integration, multiplication, and their inverses through closed-loop operation.
### To Be Continued...