由信息与通信工程学院主办的“信通论坛”本次邀请到荷兰代尔夫特理工大学Sijun Du助理教授来校进行学术交流,具体安排如下,欢迎感兴趣的师生参加。
一、主 题:Sustainable power solutions for future Internet-of-Things
二、主讲人:Sijun Du (Delft University of Technology,Assistant Professor )
三、时 间:2021年10月28日(周四)下午15:00
四、参加方式:
线上平台:ZOOM Meeting
会议链接:https://tudelft.zoom.us/j/96943603865?pwd=TFdQU2xaaGNEMjI1cHlabmRaN2xGZz09
会议I D:969 4360 3865
会议密码:359184
五、主持人:常亮 (电子科技大学,副研究员)
六、内容简介:
While the Internet of Things (IoT) continues to expand in both number and variety of deployed devices, keeping them powered unobtrusively is an unmet need. Practical systems have concentrated on device efficiency, often reducing function and/or performance so that the battery or device replacement cycle can be lengthened. While batteries have remained the primary energy sources due to their energy density, they are very impractical due to the requirements for periodic recharging and/or replacements in certain sensing contexts requiring the operation of such systems over a significant period of time, including autonomous sensors, biomedical implants and wearable electronics. In order to address this challenge and extend the operational lifetime, there has been an emerging research interest to harvest energy from environmental energy. In this talk, Sijun Du will introduce his research on designing integrated circuits for energy harvesting and wireless power transfer systems used in above-mentioned autonomous systems.
七、主讲人简介

Sijun Du is an assistant professor at Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands. He received the Ph.D. degree at University of Cambridge in 2017. After graduation, he joined UC Berkeley as a postdoctoral fellow. Since 2020, he joined the TU Delft as an assistant professor (tenure-track). He is now leading a group consisting of 13 research students at the Department of Microelectronics.
During his PhD research at the University of Cambridge, he spent less than three years to finish his research and submit his thesis (normally four years are required). Based on his Ph.D. research, he published more than 40 journal & conference papers and 3 US patents, including first-authored publications in the top journal (IEEE JSSC) and top conference (ISSCC) in the Integrated Circuits industry. He presented the first ever ISSCC paper from the University of Cambridge in 2018.
He is an IEEE senior member. His current research interests include energy-efficient power management integrated circuits (PMIC), energy harvesting, wireless power transfer, analog/digital signal processing and low-power communications used in autonomous wireless sensors for IoT, wearable electronics, biomedical devices and microrobots.