Developing and evaluating an 8 Gbps high-speed relay MMIC for an ATE) using a gallium nitride.
An 8 Gbps high-speed relay MMIC for an Automated Test Equipment (ATE) using a gallium nitride is developed and evaluated. Metal-Insulator-Semiconductor structure with a tantalum oxynitride is employed to reduce a leakage current for ATE applications. The fabricated MMIC shows 0.3 nA of the leakage current, 12 GHz of a -3 dB bandwidth, and excellent eye-opening of 8 Gbps signals with a 18-leads QFN package. The MMIC has 2.0 x 2.4 mm of package size and achieves higher channel density than an existing photo relay generally applied in ATE.
Click here to read more. Article appears in Advantest’s June 2022 issue of Probo.
Name* (Note: This name will be displayed publicly)
Email* (This will not be displayed publicly)
Is there about to be a major disruption in the EDA industry, coupled to the emerging era of domain specific architectures? Academia certainly thinks so.
Debate is just beginning about how in-vehicle data is collected, shared, and stored.
Changes are steady in the memory hierarchy, but how and where that memory is accessed is having a big impact.
Fully self-driving cars will require AI that can learn as they drive.
Biden’s administration publishes strategy for implementing the CHIPS Act.
Increased transistor density and utilization are creating memory performance issues.
The industry reached an inflection point where analog is getting a fresh look, but digital will not cede ground readily.
Who’s doing what in next-gen chips, and when they expect to do it.
Is there about to be a major disruption in the EDA industry, coupled to the emerging era of domain specific architectures? Academia certainly thinks so.
100% inspection, more data, and traceability will reduce assembly defects plaguing automotive customer returns.
Manufacturability reaches sufficient level to compete with flip-chip BGA and 2.5D.
Engineers are finding ways to effectively thermally dissipate heat from complex modules.
Steps are being taken to minimize problems, but they will take years to implement.