Full-time temporary employment. The position is limited to a maximum of five years.
Description
The European Innovative Training Network ‘SILIKA’ on Massive MIMO mm-wave antenna systems for new telecommunication services offers 12 prestigious PhD student positions in the area of antennas, electronics and signal processing, starting in the autumn of 2016. SILIKA consists of 8 leading European R&D laboratories from universities, industries, and technology institutes in the domain of wireless infrastructure that are located in The Netherlands, Sweden and Belgium.
SILIKA will provide the PhD students with a comprehensive set of theoretical and practical skills relevant for innovation and long-term employability in a rapidly growing sector. This highly innovative training will cover several inter-disciplinary areas, such as fast computational electromagnetics methods, mm-wave array antenna design and optimization, hybrid analog and digital signal-processing, mm-wave electronics design and integration and packaging of mm-wave antennas with electronics. Each PhD student will be enrolled in a doctoral programme and is jointly supervised by supervisors from the academic and industry sector, where they spend 50% of their time.
SILIKA aims to develop new technologies and design methods that are required to meet the continuously growing need for higher data-rates in wireless communications. The focus will be on innovative antenna system concepts utilizing silicon semiconductor electronics that can generate or receive at millimeter-wave frequencies in order to truly expand wireless communications into the outer limits of radio technology.
The PhD project titles (located at Chalmers) are as follows:
PhD project 1: Advanced system-level design approaches for irregular array architectures
PhD project 2: Integrated Antenna Systems Employing Low Loss MMIC-Waveguide-Antenna Transitions
PhD project 3: Multi-physics IC design: Circuit/EM/Thermal
PhD project 4: Calibration of antenna array systems and impairment mitigation methods
Research Fields
Engineering - Electrical engineering
Physics - Applied physics
Further details:
http://ec.europa.eu