Mixed-Signal Computer Aided Design Research Lab
UA MSCAD Laboratory Alumni
I am launching a scholarship campaign in honor of my past students to be funded by my past students. The group, 100-for-100, will fund scholarships for future electrical engineering students specifically in the MSCAD lab. I am asking each former student to donate $100/year to support the scholarship program (i.e., 100 people for $100). (We will supply you with a tax-deductible notice.) The money received will be pooled to sponsor/support graduate and undergraduate students of the MSCAD lab in power electronic packaging, power electronic circuit design, computer-aided design, device modeling, and integrated circuit design. I plan to take this opportunity to memorialize two of our fallen graduate students: Dr. Mike Glover and Dr. Hung Phi Hoang. Their names will each be associated with one of the scholarships. Every dollar goes directly to the students. No overhead, no other purpose. Just to support students worthy of becoming MSCAD Alumni someday and joining your club!
Sincerely,
Dr. Alan Mantooth,
Distinguished Professor
Our Research
Recent News
Work in SiC Integrated Circuits Presented at 2014 IMAPS High Temperature Conference
The University of Arkansas had two papers presented at the international Conference on High Temperature Electronics (HiTEC 2014), May 13-15th in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
New Publications in IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, Vol 29 Issue 5
The MSCAD group is pleased to announce three new papers in the fifth issues of IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics for 2014, now available online.
Work in SiC CMOS Integrated Circuit Presented at 2014 GOMAC
The University of Arkansas’s collaborative work in integrated CMOS silicon carbide circuits with Raytheon and Ozark Integrated Circuits was presented at the 2014 Government Microcircuit Applications and Critical Technology (GOMAC Tech) conference in Charleston, South Carolina.
The Mixed-Signal Computer Aided Design group is located at the Cato Springs Research Center (CSRC) and at the Engineering Research Center (ENRC). The lab is part of the Arkansas Circuit Design Center (ACDC).