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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
221

An investigation of the hydro-electric possibilities for farm power of a small brook in Methuen, Massachusetts

Schatz, Edwin C. (Edwin Conrad), Townend, Harold L January 1923 (has links)
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, 1923. / by Edwin C. Schatz, Harold L. Townend. / B.S.
222

Computer aided static and transient design of a class of multivibrators: the parallel Schmitt circuit.

Fung, Victor K. (Victor Kwok-King) January 1966 (has links)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering. Thesis. 1966. M.S. / Bibliography: leaf 129. / M.S.
223

Transient analysis of power selsyns.

Chung, Shih-Mu January 1945 (has links)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering. Thesis. 1945. M.S. / Bibliography: leaf 80. / M.S.
224

Localized defects in PbTe via a K.--APW energy band calculation.

Parada, Nelson de Jesus January 1969 (has links)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering. Thesis. 1969. Ph.D. / MICROFICHE COPY ALSO AVAILABLE IN BARKER ENGINEERING LIBRARY. / Vita. / Bibliography: p. 158-161. / Ph.D.
225

Vibrating-string electromechanical filters

Logue, Stanley H January 1952 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.) Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering, 1952. / by Stanley H. Logue. / M.S.
226

Semiconductor Memory Applications in Radiation Environment, Hardware Security and Machine Learning System

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: Semiconductor memory is a key component of the computing systems. Beyond the conventional memory and data storage applications, in this dissertation, both mainstream and eNVM memory technologies are explored for radiation environment, hardware security system and machine learning applications. In the radiation environment, e.g. aerospace, the memory devices face different energetic particles. The strike of these energetic particles can generate electron-hole pairs (directly or indirectly) as they pass through the semiconductor device, resulting in photo-induced current, and may change the memory state. First, the trend of radiation effects of the mainstream memory technologies with technology node scaling is reviewed. Then, single event effects of the oxide based resistive switching random memory (RRAM), one of eNVM technologies, is investigated from the circuit-level to the system level. Physical Unclonable Function (PUF) has been widely investigated as a promising hardware security primitive, which employs the inherent randomness in a physical system (e.g. the intrinsic semiconductor manufacturing variability). In the dissertation, two RRAM-based PUF implementations are proposed for cryptographic key generation (weak PUF) and device authentication (strong PUF), respectively. The performance of the RRAM PUFs are evaluated with experiment and simulation. The impact of non-ideal circuit effects on the performance of the PUFs is also investigated and optimization strategies are proposed to solve the non-ideal effects. Besides, the security resistance against modeling and machine learning attacks is analyzed as well. Deep neural networks (DNNs) have shown remarkable improvements in various intelligent applications such as image classification, speech classification and object localization and detection. Increasing efforts have been devoted to develop hardware accelerators. In this dissertation, two types of compute-in-memory (CIM) based hardware accelerator designs with SRAM and eNVM technologies are proposed for two binary neural networks, i.e. hybrid BNN (HBNN) and XNOR-BNN, respectively, which are explored for the hardware resource-limited platforms, e.g. edge devices.. These designs feature with high the throughput, scalability, low latency and high energy efficiency. Finally, we have successfully taped-out and validated the proposed designs with SRAM technology in TSMC 65 nm. Overall, this dissertation paves the paths for memory technologies’ new applications towards the secure and energy-efficient artificial intelligence system. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 2018
227

Interaction Analytics of Software Factory Recordings

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: A human communications research project at Arizona State University aurally recorded the daily interactions of aware and consenting employees and their visiting clients at the Software Factory, a software engineering consulting team, over a three year period. The resulting dataset contains valuable insights on the communication networks that the participants formed however it is far too vast to be processed manually by researchers. In this work, digital signal processing techniques are employed to develop a software toolkit that can aid in estimating the observable networks contained in the Software Factory recordings. A four-step process is employed that starts with parsing available metadata to initially align the recordings followed by alignment estimation and correction. Once aligned, the recordings are processed for common signals that are detected across multiple participants’ recordings which serve as a proxy for conversations. Lastly, visualization tools are developed to graphically encode the estimated similarity measures to efficiently convey the observable network relationships to assist in future human communications research. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2018
228

Energy Modeling of Machine Learning Algorithms on General Purpose Hardware

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: Articial Neural Network(ANN) has become a for-bearer in the field of Articial Intel- ligence. The innovations in ANN has led to ground breaking technological advances like self-driving vehicles,medical diagnosis,speech Processing,personal assistants and many more. These were inspired by evolution and working of our brains. Similar to how our brain evolved using a combination of epigenetics and live stimulus,ANN require training to learn patterns.The training usually requires a lot of computation and memory accesses. To realize these systems in real embedded hardware many Energy/Power/Performance issues needs to be solved. The purpose of this research is to focus on methods to study data movement requirement for generic Neural Net- work along with the energy associated with it and suggest some ways to improve the design.Many methods have suggested ways to optimize using mix of computation and data movement solutions without affecting task accuracy. But these methods lack a computation model to calculate the energy and depend on mere back of the envelope calculation. We realized that there is a need for a generic quantitative analysis for memory access energy which helps in better architectural exploration. We show that the present architectural tools are either incompatible or too slow and we need a better analytical method to estimate data movement energy. We also propose a simplistic yet effective approach that is robust and expandable by users to support various systems. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2018
229

Parallel Doherty RF Power Amplifier For WiMAX Applications

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: This work covers the design and implementation of a Parallel Doherty RF Power Amplifier in a GaN HEMT process for medium power macro-cell (16W) base station applications. This work improves the key parameters of a Doherty Power Amplifier including the peak and back-off efficiency, operational instantaneous bandwidth and output power by proposing a Parallel Doherty amplifier architecture. As there is a progression in the wireless communication systems from the first generation to the future 5G systems, there is ever increasing demand for higher data rates which means signals with higher peak-to-average power ratios (PAPR). The present modulation schemes require PAPRs close to 8-10dB. So, there is an urgent need to develop energy efficient power amplifiers that can transmit these high data rate signals. The Doherty Power Amplifier (DPA) is the most common PA architecture in the cellular infrastructure, as it achieves reasonably high back-off power levels with good efficiency. This work advances the DPA architecture by proposing a Parallel Doherty Power Amplifier to broaden the PAs instantaneous bandwidth, designed with frequency range of operation for 2.45 – 2.70 GHz to support WiMAX applications and future broadband signals. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2018
230

Optimized Stress Testing for Flexible Hybrid Electronics Designs

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: Flexible hybrid electronics (FHE) is emerging as a promising solution to combine the benefits of printed electronics and silicon technology. FHE has many high-impact potential areas, such as wearable applications, health monitoring, and soft robotics, due to its physical advantages, which include light weight, low cost and the ability conform to different shapes. However, physical deformations that can occur in the field lead to significant testing and validation challenges. For example, designers have to ensure that FHE devices continue to meet specs even when the components experience stress due to bending. Hence, physical deformation, which is hard to emulate, has to be part of the test procedures developed for FHE devices. This paper is the first to analyze stress experience at different parts of FHE devices under different bending conditions. Then develop a novel methodology to maximize the test coverage with minimum number of text vectors with the help of a mixed integer linear programming formulation. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2018

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