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Lieuwe Leene PhD. MSc. BEng. | 2021-08-23T17:52:07+02:00 | false | true |
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Since 2019, I have been part of the Novelda RFIC design group where we design the most accurate human presence sensor in the world based on ultra wide band technology. We are a team of 8 designing a IEEE 802.15 compliant single-chip solution for short-range radar applications using a custom transceiver. I primarily work on the critical timing circuits for clock redistribution, frequency scaling, and synchronization taking custom mixed-signal circuits from concept and layout implementation all the way to characterization and wafer sort planning.
Prior to 2019 I was with the NGNI lab at Imperial College London developing implantable medical devices specialized for neuro-scientific studies and electroceutical therapies such as deep-brain-stimulation and brain-machine-interfaces. I specialized in realizing ultra-low-power instrumentation systems that can be implanted and innovated circuit techniques for efficiently processing biomedical signals. Most of my success came from applying time-domain techniques to realize sensing circuits with exceptional dynamic range such that a wider variety of neurological components can be picked up during recording or stimulation.
Employment Record
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Senior IC Design Engineer
IC Design Team Oslo Office,
Novelda AS Oslo, Norway
Aug. 2019 - Now
- Responsible for RF transceiver clocking module and phase locked loop design for a Ultra-Wideband human presence sensor operating in the 7.8 GHz band.
- Acting as System and IP integration lead handling design delivery such as netlist, layout, timing, and constraint files along with sign-off reports.
- Designing full-custom high-speed digital logic for both asynchronous and timing critical modules.
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Research Associate
Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology,
Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Dec. 2016 – Dec. 2019
- System architect for the ENGINI project worked towards a wireless chip scale neural implant for chronic neuroscience and healthcare applications.
- CMOS fabrication and CAD tool integration lead for the FORTE project which aims to integrate memristive devices with standard CMOS.
- Lead designer for ASIC implementation and defined target deliverables Contributed to publications, grants, and the development of intellectual property
- Facilitated goal driven team management and technical project planning Presented at conferences to communicate findings to the academic community
Analog Signal Processing Technical Committee Member
Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology,
Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Dec. 2015 – Dec. 2019
- Reviewed 40+ manuscripts in the past 5 years from JSSC, TCASI, TCASII, and TBCAS journals
- Facilitated ISCAS conference review process for selected analogue signal processing tracks
- Coordinated a ICECS conference special session on Oscillator Based Computing
Cadence System Administrator
Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology,
Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Sept. 2012 – Dec. 2019
- Served as contact for the maintenance of IT infrastructure for research group
- Provided support for computing solutions and tool configuration
- Maintained a Linux build for CAD tools (i.e. Cadence, Synopsys, Mentor, CST)
- Maintained process development kits for core IC technologies (TSMC, AMS, UMC)
Graduate Teaching Assistant
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Sept. 2013 – Dec. 2018
- Supervised & mentored master student final year projects
- Assisted for laboratory/tutorial IC design sessions as demonstrator
- Assessed of oral and written work for EE4-20 & EE9-ALAB
- Lectured analogue IC design topics for EE4-20
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Undergraduate Research Assistant
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Aug. 2010 – May 2011
- Project Topic: ASIC development for micro electrode array based testing platforms for the study of cell cultures involving low-noise front-end design and analogue-to-digital conversion.
Undergraduate Research Assistant
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Jun. 2010 – Dec. 2010
- Project Topic: Feasibility study of opto-mechanical CMOS structures for detecting aerosol micro-particles actuated by photonics involving modelling of micro-scale mechanical oscillators for phonon emission.
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Academic Record
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PhD Electrical Engineering
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Imperial College London, United Kingdom,
Sept. 2012 – Aug. 2016
- Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council studentship (EPRC-1676620)
- Thesis Topic: Large scale integration of CMOS based sensors for brain machine interfaces.
MSc Analogue and Digital IC Design
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Imperial College London, United Kingdom,
Sept. 2011 – Aug. 2012
- Graduated with Distinction
- Thesis Topic: Ultra-wideband radio and telemetry for medical implants
- Outstanding achievement prize for the MSc in A&D IC Design
- Integrated circuit design lab prize for the MSc in A&D IC Design
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BEng Analogue and Digital IC Design
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Aug. 2008 – May 2011
- Graduated with First-Class Honours
- Thesis Topic: CMOS Instrumentation for biological in-vitro multi-electrode systems.
- Swire international young fellows program scholarship
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Personal Achievements
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One of my main aspirations during my PhD was to publish in the prestigious IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits which I successfully did 2018 on my second attempt. The publication presented a voltage-controlled oscillator circuit for sensing neural activity with integrated off-set rejection. The publication process took well over half a year with the two rounds of peer-review in order to improve the article's presentation.
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In 2008, together with a couple of friends I founded the International Student Association at HKUST which as of 2022 is the 3rd largest student organization at the University. When I started my studies in Hong Kong the international student community was still relatively small and we mostly organized events among our selves. Encouraged by the student-office we formed a group to represent the growing body of international student and help each other adapt to the university lifestyle away from home.
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