Long before the word curate was ever heard outside of a museum, the GTPG took a very aggressive position in preserving and showcasing student research and design work. From day 1, the group’s website posted team projects, technical reports, research papers, and sundry outputs of academic investigation were posted to the sites.gatech.edu/propagation website. It takes a lot of time to develop and maintain this type of research website, but pays big dividends in the professional lives of the students that participate in the courses and research program. Below are several key reasons to curate both research and academic student work. [Read more…]
YouTube Video of UW Talk
Below is the embedded talk from University of Washington’s EE department, hosted by Associate Chair for Research, Prof. Matt Reynolds. The talk is a variant of the IEEE CRFID distinguished lecture talk, “Wireless Forever: the Future of RF Systems that Never Plug-in”. In it we discuss the future of RF energy-harvesting and low-powered communications, explaining how the current state-of-the-art stacks up with respect to fundamental limits. The slide deck is also available for download.
Zachary Silva’s Poster on Transparent RF and IEEE RFID 2018
Zachary Silva, working with Dr. Christopher Valenta of GTRI, presented a poster at the IEEE RFID 2018 conference in Orlando, FL entitled “”. The work is looking to make transparent RF electronics and antennas which may be integrated into optical equipment. Download the poster for a closer look.
Space Solar Power ORS Group’s Award-Winning Poster
Here is a PDF copy of the award-winning poster by the ORS team of Hiba Murali, Erik Centeno, and Evan Shi (PhD mentor Cheng Qi). In this work they explore the use of transparent, printed RF electronics to achieve a low-cost rectenna farm that could be used for future space solar power systems. This team also had two external presentations on related research at IEEE conferences this academic year.
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