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Home > The Amp Hour Electronics Podcast > #459 – An Interview with Tom Lee
Podcast: The Amp Hour Electronics Podcast
Episode:

#459 – An Interview with Tom Lee

Category: Science & Medicine
Duration: 01:14:32
Publish Date: 2019-09-22 23:01:24
Description:

Welcome Dr Thomas (Tom) Lee of the Microwave Integrated Circuits Lab (SMIrC) at Stanford University!

This episode is sponsored by Rohde and Schwarz. Check out AskAnEngineer.us for more info about their value line test equipment.

  • Tom is friends with two past guests, Jeri Ellsworth and Kent Lundberg
  • Tom owns a LOT of scopes (200 or so)
  • First scope was a Heathkit
  • The Tek465 had nice user design
  • “I didn’t like an intermediate layer “
  • Calibrating scopes
  • John Addis (Tek)
  • Adding a square wave to front panel
  • Protection circuits
  • Tom got started in electronics fixing TVs
  • He then went to work at Wavetek with people like Joe Deavenport
  • Tom went to MIT and worked under Jim Roberge (check out the video series where Jim is lecturing on-camera)
  • He proposed a thesis that was the world’s first integrated CMOS radio
  • Marvin Minsky
  • “The thesis doesn’t change the world…it changes you”
  • CMOS was considered crap, was mostly used for wristwatches and calculators
  • Other types of MOS and BJT circuits were considered to be much better.
  • Tom used MOSIS, the IC bundling service mentioned on this program before.
  • Didn’t have PDKs
  • Magic from Berkeley allowed Tom to see the DRC errors as they happened.
  • He ended up building an FM radio…without any inductors!
  • Made gyrators into inductors
  • Moved to Analog Devices and worked with Barrie Gilbert, Paul Brokaw
  • Moving back to California and went to work for a startup RAMBUS
  • Stanford wanted someone to do RF and give a first class on RF chip design
  • Tom started in 1994 and started the first microwave IC lab.
  • Tom and his grad students created the first GPS CMOS receiver
  • Used to be 1 GHz and above is microwave
  • Many of Tom’s students are (truly) seeing Maxwell’s equations for real for the first time
  • What are the mental models?
  • Tom said he “inflicts history on students”. This is also in the early chapters of Tom’s book, Planar Microwave Engineering
  • Maxwell didn’t use vector calculus, he used quaternian form.
  • Every course Tom teaches has a lab, including his undergrad lab which involves copper tape and making a radio.
  • A lot of faculty have never built stuff
  • He is now working with students on mmwave and 5G (because that’s where a lot of the research dollars are right now)
  • Beamforming to get aggregate bandwidth
  • Printed electronics for power delivery, serving devices that are in the mW level not the W level
  • Feature sizes of CMOS
  • Tom is on the board of Xilinx
  • Tom is taking a year sabbatical and working on a book about instrumentation
  • He hopes to ask many of the creators about the secrets inside the test equipment he often is reverse engineering
  • Jim Williams told him to buy a rubidium clock (standard) at a flea market.
  • DARPA to do a chip scale electric clock
  • Smoke was released in space station
  • Read more about Tom’s research on his group’s website
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