Smart Sensor Systems 2007

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Biographies of the lecturers

Jan Bosiers
Jan Bosiers graduated as Electronic Engineer from the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium in 1980. From 1980 to 1984, he was a research scientist at this University where he developed high-resolution linear CCD imagers. From 1985 to 1986, he was a consulting engineer at the U.S.Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., working on deep-depletion, backside illuminated CCDs for detection of UV and X-ray radiation. From October 1986 to March 2001, he was with Philips in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. Since April 2002, he is with DALSA Professional Imaging in Eindhoven. He has worked on the research, development and project management of imagers for consumer and medical applications, and is currently R&D Director at DALSA in Eindhoven. He has contributed to over 30 imaging papers. He received the first "Walter Kosonocky Award" honoring the best paper on Electronic Imaging for the years 1998-1999, for his 1998 IEDM contribution on FT-CCDs for digital camera applications.

Paddy French
Paddy French received his B.Sc. in mathematics and M.Sc. in electronics from Southampton University, UK, in 1981 and 1982, respectively. In 1986 he obtained his Ph.D., also from Southampton University, which was a study of the piezoresistive effect in polysilicon. After 18 months as a post-doc at Delft University, The Netherlands, he moved to Japan in 1988. For 3 years he worked on sensors for automotives at Central Engineering Laboratories of Nissan Motor Company. He returned to Delft University in May 1991 were he has been involved in research on micromachining and process optimization related to sensors. Since 2002 he is chairing the Laboratory for Electronic Instrumentation. In 1999 he was awarded the Anthony van Leeuwenhoek chair. He received the title award of “Simon Stevin Meester” from the Dutch Technology Foundation.

Ali Heidary
Ali Heidary received his BSc and MSc on electronics and microelectronics in 1991 and 1995 respectively. Then he joined the Guilan university as an academic staffmember. During this period he taught courses on Electronics, Solid State Physics and Communication Circuits. In November 2004 he joined the Electronic Instrumentation Laboratory of TUDelft, The Netherlands as a PhD student to work on mixed-mode smart sensor interfaces

Johan Huijsing
Johan H. Huijsing was born in Bandung, Indonesia, on May 21, 1938. He received his M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands, in 1969, and his Ph.D. from the same University in 1981 for work on operational amplifiers. Since 1969 he has been a member of the Research and Teaching Staff of the Electronic Instrumentation Laboratory, Department of Electrical Engineering, Delft University of Technology, where he became a full Professor of Electronic Instrumentation since 1990, and professor-emeritus since 2003. He teaches courses on Electrical Measurement Techniques, Electronic Instrumentation, Operational Amplifiers and Analog-to-digital Converters. His field of research is Analog Circuit Design (operational amplifiers, analog multipliers, etc.) and Integrated Smart Sensors. He is fellow of IEEE. He received the title award of “Simon Stevin Meester” from the Dutch Technology Foundation.

Ratcho M. Ivanov
Ratcho Ivanov was born in v.Razliv, Bulgaria on December 25, 1945. He received his M.Sc in Electronics engineering from Technical University, Sofia, Bulgaria in 1969. Since 1970, he has been employed as assistant professor. From 1975 to 1977 he specialized on Microprocessor-based systems in Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan. In 1980 he obtained his Ph.D from Technical University, Sofia. From 1986 he was associate professor and from 2000 a full professor in Technical University, Sofia, Bulgaria. He has over 25 years of experience in teaching, design, development and implementation of embedded systems, microcontroller and microprocessor based industrial systems, smart sensors systems and applications. He is a senior member of IEEE.

Paul de Jong
Paul C. de Jong was born in Nieuwkoop, The Netherlands, on May 13, 1967.
He received the ingenieurs (M.Sc.) degree in electrical engineering from Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands, in 1990, and the PhD degree from the same university in 1998. In 1990 he joined Schlumberger, Clamart, France and Houston, TX, USA, where he was involved with high-temperature electronics for down-hole applications. In 1992 he joined the Laboratory of Electronics, Delft University of Technology, for a research project in high-temperature sensor electronics. In 1998 he joined TNO, The Hague, The Netherlands, working and leading several mechatronics projects. In 2001 he joined Xensor Integration, Delft, The Netherlands where he was involved in research and development of integrated smart sensor systems. Since 2004, he is employed by ECN where he is groupleader of solar energy (PV) module technology.

Pavel Kejik
Pavel Kejik was born in the Czech Republic in 1971. He received the diploma degree in 1994 and the Ph.D. degree in 1999 at the Czech Technical University of Prague. In 1999, he joined the Institute of Microelectronics and Microsystems at the EPFL to work on Institute's circuit design and testing. His research interests include fluxgate magnetometry and micro-Hall sensors combined with mixed-signal IC design and low-noise circuit design for industrial applications.

Alexander Kerezov
Alexander Kerezov was born in Karlovo, Bulgaria on March 18, 1968. He received his M.Sc. in electronics engineering from Technical University, Sofia, Bulgaria in 1993. From 1993 to 1995 he has been a researcher in Istituto di Fisiologia Clinica, C.N.R. - Pisa, Italy in the field of Real time digital signal processing. Since March 1996, he has been employed as assistance professor at the Department of Electronics, Sofia Technical University, where he is involved in research, development lecturing activities in the field of microcontrollers, digital signal processing and embedded systems.

Harry Kerkvliet
Harry M.M. Kerkvliet was born in Voorburg, The Netherlands, on March 18,1945. He graduated in electronic engineering at Royal Polytechnic Institute PBNA, Arnhem, The Netherlands, in 1974. From 1977-1987 he was a teacher in Electronics for evening classes at the Intermediate Technical School. In 1964 he joined the Department of Electrical Engineering of Delft University of Technology and was involved in areas of television-signal-processing techniques and electronic-system design. His current interests include signal processing and smart sensor systems.

Xiujun Li
Xiujun Li was born in Tianjin, China on February 19, 1963. He received his B.Sc. in physics and M.Sc. in electrical engineering from Nankai University, Tianjin, China in 1983 and 1986, respectively. In 1997, he received his Ph.D. degree from Department of Electrical Engineering, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. Since September 1996, he has been employed as assistance researcher at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science, Delft University of Technology, where he was involved in research and the development of smart capacitive sensors and low-cost interfaces for smart sensors. Since 1997 he worked in part time for SMARTEC B.V. on smart temperature sensors and smart sensor interfaces. In 2002 he joined Bradford engineering B.V., Heerle, The Netherlands, where is performs research and development of instruments for the Space Industry.

Kofi Makinwa
Kofi A. A. Makinwa (M’97–SM’05) received the B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria, the M.E.E. degree from Philips International Institute, Eindhoven, The Netherlands, and the Ph.D. degree from Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands for his thesis on electrothermal sigma-delta modulators.
From 1989 to 1999, he was a research scientist at Philips Research Laboratories, where he designed sensor systems for interactive displays, and analog front-ends for optical and magnetic recording systems. In 1999, he joined Delft University of Technology, where he is currently an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Mathematics. He holds nine U.S. patents, has authored or co-authored over 40 technical papers, and has given tutorials at the Eurosensors and the IEEE Sensors conferences. His main research interests are in the design of precision analog circuitry, sigma-delta modulators and sensor interfaces. Dr. Makinwa is on the program committees of several international conferences, among which are the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) and the International Solid-state Sensors and Actuators Conference (Transducers). In 2005, he received the Veni and Simon Stevin Gezel awards from the Dutch Technology Foundation (STW), and was a co-recipient of the ISSCC 2005 Jack Kilby award.

Gerard Meijer
Gerard C.M. Meijer was born in Wateringen, The Netherlands, on June 28,
1945. He received the ingenieurs (M.S.) and Ph.D. degrees in electrical
engineering from the Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands, in 1972 and 1982, respectively. Since 1972 he has been a member of the Research and Teaching staff of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Delft University of Technology, where he was engaged in research and teaching on analog ICs and smart sensor systems. Since 2001 he is a full professor of the Laboratory of Electronic Instrumentation of the same university. In 1984 and part-time during 1985-1987, he was seconded to the Delft Instruments Company in Delft, where he was involved in the development of industrial level gauges and temperature
transducers. In 1996 he co-founded the company SensArt, where he is a
consultant in the field of sensor systems. He received the title award of “Simon Stevin Meester” from the Dutch Technology Foundation.

Michiel Pertijs
Michiel A. P. Pertijs was born in Roosendaal, The Netherlands, on May 31, 1977. He received the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering (both cum laude) from Delft University Technology in 2000 and 2005, respectively. Since August 2005, he is working as a circuit design engineer for National Semiconductor in Delft, The Netherlands.
From 2000 to 2005, he worked as a research assistant at the Electronic Instrumentation Laboratory of Delft University of Technology, on the subject of high-accuracy CMOS smart temperature sensors. In co-operation with Philips Semiconductors, his research has been applied in commercial temperature sensors, and has resulted in four patent applications. At Delft University, he has been involved in various teaching activities.
Dr. Pertijs received the ISSCC 2005 Jack Kilby Award for Outstanding Student Paper. His research interests include analog and mixed-signal electronics and smart sensors.

Frank Riedijk
Frank R. Riedijk was born in Delft, The Netherlands, on March 23, 1965. He received his M.Sc Degree in 1988 from the Delft University of Technology and the Ph.D degree from the same university in 1993 for work on smart sensors with bus interface. In 1997 he founded the company smart sensor devices, now merged into Xensor Integration, where he is active in high tech sensor projects, such as integrated fingerprint sensors for portable telephones and space data acquisition ASICS. In these fields he is the holder of 5 patents.

Dafina Tanase
Dafina Tanase received her Mechanical Engineering Degree from Transylvania University Brasov, Romania, in 1995 and her MSc. Degree in Applied Computer Science from Free University, Brussels, in 1998. In 2003 she received her Ph.D. from Delft University of Technology on the development of a magnetic-based navigation system for endovascular interventions. Currently, she is working as a postdoctoral fellow in the Electronic Instrumentation laboratory at TU Delft on the development of sensor systems for medical applications.

Roland Thewes
Roland Thewes was born in Marl, Germany, in 1962. He received the Dipl.-Ing. and Dr.-Ing. degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Dortmund, Germany, in 1990 and 1995, respectively. Since 1994 he has been with the Research Labs of Siemens AG and Infineon Technologies, where he was active in the design of non-volatile memories and in the field of reliability and yield of analog CMOS circuits. From 1997-1999, he managed projects in the fields of design for manufacturability, reliability, analog device performance, and analog circuit design. Since 2000, he has been responsible for the Lab on Mixed-Signal Circuits of Corporate Research of Infineon Technologies and for the development of CMOS-based biosensors. He has authored or co-authored more than 100 publications, gives lectures at the University of Ulm, and serves as a member of the technical program committees of the International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC), of the International Electron Device Meeting (IEDM), and of the European Solid State Device Research Conference (ESSDERC).

Pieter Trimp
Pieter J. Trimp was born in Rotterdam, The Netherlands in 1949. In 1968 he received his Electronics degree at the Cristiaan Huygens School in Rotterdam. He received his first and second Higher Electronics Engineering diploma in Cybernetics in 1970 and 1972, respectively. In 1977 he received his diploma from the HTS in Rotterdam. He started his career in 1969 by joining the Peekel Instruments B.V. in Rotterdam. After one year he moved to the Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry at the Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, and 4 years later he joined the Electronic Instrumentation Laboratory and is currently involved in medical projects like minimally invasive surgery and intervention techniques. He is also active in the project Sensory Feedback for Surgical Drilling.

Michael Vellekoop
Michael J. Vellekoop was born in Amsterdam in 1960. He received the B.Sc. degree in Physics in 1982 and the Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering in 1994. In 1988 he co-founded Xensor Integration B.V. where he was managing director until 1996. In that year he initiated a new group on the topic of physical chemosensors at the DIMES Electronic Instrumentation Laboratory of the Delft University of Technology, where in 1997 he became an associated professor. Since 2001 he is a full professor of Industrial Sensor Systems at the Institute of Sensor and Actuator Systems at the Vienna University of Technology, Austria. In 2002 he became head of this Institute. Since 2005 he is a corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and in the same year he received the Eurosensors Fellow award. Keywords of research are physical chemosensors and biosensors, sensor systems, biochips, micro & nanofluidics, micro & nanotechnology.

Chris Verhoeven
Was born in the Hague in Holland in 1959. He received his M.Sc. degree in 1985 from the Electrical Engineering department. He received the Ph.D degree from Delft University of Technology working on oscillator design theory in 1990. As an associate professor, he has been working on the structured design of amplifiers and oscillators, has several patents on oscillators and is the author of the book Structured Electronic Design. Presently he is responsible for the curriculum of the Delft-Fudan International School of Microelectronics in Shanghai and work package leader in the MISAT program concentrating on the design of high-performance space-qualified electronics. He is also still much involved in the further development of the structured electronic design theory.

Cassan Visser
Cassan Visser was born in Utrecht on December 17 1951. He received his MSc degree in Physics in 1981 at the University of Utrecht. From 1985-1987 he worked as a research assistant at the Department of Electrical Engineering in Boston University and later in the Micro-Electronic Department at the University of Madison Wisconsin, where he also studied material science. He currently works as a Senior Process Engineer, specializing in Epitaxy and CVD at the Delft Institute of Microelectronics and Submicron Technology (DIMES).

Guijie Wang
Guijie Wang was born on 10 December 1963 in HeNan, China. She received the B.Sc degree from the Physics Department of Nankai University in 1984 and the M.Sc degree from the Electrical Engineering Department of Nankai University in 1987. She received the Ph.D degree from Delft University of Technology at the Faculty of Information Technology and Systems in 2005. She was working as a teacher in the Biomedical Engineering Department of Tianjin University from 1987 to 1993. She joined the Delft University of Technology at the Faculty of Information Technology and Systems in 1996. Her current research interests are integrated circuit of bandgap references and temperature sensors in CMOS technology and their applications in sensor interface circuits.

Xinyang Wang
Xinyang Wang received his BSc in electrical engineering from Zhejiang University, China in 2002 and MSc in microelectronics system design (with honor) from University of Southampton, UK, in 2004. Then he joined the Electronic Instrumentation Laboratory of TUDelft , The Netherlands in 2004 as a PhD student to work on CMOS image sensor in sub-micron CMOS process, mainly concentrate on the pixel noise characterization.

Reinoud Wolffenbuttel
Reinoud F. Wolffenbuttel received a M.Sc. degree in 1984 and a Ph.D. degree in 1988, both from the Delft University of Technology. Between 1986 and 1993 he has been an assistant professor and since 1993 he has been an associate professor at the Department of Microelectronics, Faculty of Information Technology and Systems of the Delft University of Technology and is involved in instrumentation and measurement in general and on-chip functional integration of microelectronic circuits and silicon sensor, fabrication compatibility issues and micromachining in silicon and microsystems in particular. He was a visitor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA in 1992, 1999 and 2001, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan in 1995 and EPFL Lausanne, Switzerland in 1997. He is the recipient of a 1997 NWO pioneer award. He served as general chairman of the Dutch national sensor conference in 1996, Eurosensors in 1999 and Micromechanics Europe in 2003.