General
     Home
     Welcome
     Directory
     History
     Impact
     Calendar
     Events
     News
     Contact Information
     Maps & Directions
     Annual Reports

Information for:
     Prospective Students
     New Students
     Current Students
     TAs
     New Faculty
     Industry
     Alumni

Information about:
     Admissions
     Programs
     Courses
     Research
     Faculty
     Staff
     Procedures & Regulations
     Forms & Petitions
     Scholarships & Fellowships
     Seminar Series
     Accreditation
     Surveys

Openings
     Faculty Positions
     Postdoctoral Positions
     TA Application
     Job Board

                                 Events Home   Upcoming Events   Seminar Series
                                 Workshops      PhD Defenses        Visitor Seminars     Faculty Lectures

2007-2008 Faculty Lecture Series in Electrical Engineering
Winter 2008


Desensitizing Halfband Interpolation Filters
Professor Alan Willson
UCLA Electrical Engineering

Wednesday, February 20, 2008 at 1:00PM

54-134 Engineering IV Building
Refreshments Served

Abstract: A very common component in digital circuitry for communications systems is the halfband filter. Halfband filters are often used in cooperation with up-samplers and down-samplers when a sampling-rate change is required. While techniques for designing these filters are well known, an entirely new design method has just been discovered wherein these filters can be made to possess a significant desensitivity to the filter’s tap coefficient values. Such desensitivity can be exploited to yield halfband filters with reduced hardware requirements, which leads to circuits having lower power consumption, higher operating speeds, and smaller IC area. This talk will give a brief introduction to the concept of halfband filters and the applications of halfband filters. It will then explain the rationale and the method for the desensitizing of the filters and, finally, will illustrate through design examples and further explanation how the desensitivity improves upon the conventional designs.

Biography

 
 
Copyright © 2007. The University of California. All rights reserved.
UCLA Electrical Engineering. Email for comments on or questions about the website.