Dr. Loan Pham-Nguyen is currently Associate Professor, Deputy Head of Department of Electronics, at School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, HUST. She is also Head of the laboratory group of Smart Embedded System and IC Design.
She graduated from Ecole Centrale de Lyon, France in 2005, then received M.Sc. degree in Microelectronics (2006) from University Joseph Fourier and Ph.D degree in Microelectronics (2009) from Grenoble Institute of Technology (INPG), France. Her PhD project was funded by STMicroelectronics and focused on the fabrication and electrical characterization of advanced Fully-Depleted SOI MOSFETs.
Since 2010, she has leaded a research group in Analog IC design at HUST, Vietnam. Her research focuses on power management in wireless energy harvesting sysem for different applications from IoT to medical wearable devices.
Since 2012, her group has started a collaboration project with NICE lab, KAIST (Korea) on (1) the design of wireless charger for mobile application and (2) LDO for RFID tag chip (3) Power management IC for thermal-electric generator (TEG). Many chips were taped-out and functions successfully in collaboration with KAIST. Since 2017, her group has started collaboration with Prof. Le Hanh Phuc from UC San Diego, USA in a common project of "design of LED driver integarted circuit for high voltage application".
Her students work closely with researchers of NICE lab-KAIST, Korea and IC design team of UCSD, USA for collaborative projects. Also, she is author of 1 textbook and co-author of 1 book chapter, 10 journals, over 40 international conference papers.
Prof. Hanh-Phuc Le
Professor Hanh-Phuc Le received the Ph.D. degree from UC Berkeley (2013), the M.S. degree from KAIST, Korea (2006), and the B.S. degree from HUST, Vietnam (2004), all in Electrical Engineering. In 2012, he co-founded and served as the CTO at Lion Semiconductor until October 2015. He was with the University of Colorado Boulder from 2016 to 2019, and then joined the ECE department at UC San Diego as Assistant Professor. He held R&D positions at Oracle, Intel, Rambus, JDA Tech in Korea and the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST) in Vietnam. His current research interests include miniaturized/on-die power conversions, large conversion ratios, smart power delivery and control for high performance IT systems, data centers, telecommunication, robots, automotive, mobile, wearable, and IoT applications. Professor Le received the 2012-2013 IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society Pre-doctoral Achievement Award and the 2013 Sevin Rosen Funds Award for Innovation at UC Berkeley. He authored two book chapters, over fifty journal and conference papers with one best paper award, and is an inventor with 18 U.S. patents (10 granted and 8 pending). He serves as an associate editor of the IEEE Journal of Emerging and Selected Topics in Power Electronics (JESTPE), the TPC Chair/co-chair for the International Workshop on Power Supply On Chip (PwrSoC 2018, 2020). He is currently the Chair of the IEEE Power Electronics Society Technical Committee on Power Conversion Systems and Components (IEEE PELS TC2).
Dr. Huy-Dzung Han
Huy-Dung Han currently works at the School of Electronics and Telecommunications, Hanoi University of Science and Technology. Huy-Dung does research in Electrical Engineering, Telecommunications Engineering and Communication Engineering.
Prof. Jong-Phil Hong
Jong-Phil Hong received the B.S. degree in electronic engineering from Korea Aerospace University, Seoul, South Korea, in 2005, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the Department of Information and Communications Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, South Korea, in 2007 and 2010, respectively.,In 2010, he was a Senior Engineer at the Mixed-Signal Circuit Design Team, Samsung Electronics, Yongin, South Korea. Since 2012, he has been an Associate Professor with the Department of Electrical Engineering, Chungbuk National University, Cheongju, South Korea. His main research interests include radio frequency integrated circuits such as LNA, mixer, voltage-controlled oscillator, and frequency synthesizer types...
Prof. Minkyu Je
Minkyu Je received the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from KAIST, Korea, in 1998 and 2003, respectively. He is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Information and Communication Engineering at DGIST, Korea. His research focuses on advanced IC platform development, including smart sensor interface ICs, ultra-low-power wireless communication ICs, and microsystem integration for biomedical devices, wireless sensor nodes, and mobile devices. He has over 200 publications and more than 30 patents issued or filed.
Prof. Lee Sang-Gug
Sang-Gug Lee received the B.S. degree from Gyungbook National University, Korea, in 1981, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Florida, USA, in 1989 and 1992, respectively. He is currently a Professor at KAIST, Korea. His research focuses on silicon-based RF, analog, and mixed-mode IC designs, as well as optical communications, energy harvesting, radar, and terahertz circuits using advanced CMOS technologies.
Prof. Gyung-Su Byun
Gyung-Su Byun received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from UCLA in 2010. Since 2011, he has been an Assistant Professor at West Virginia University. Previously, he was a Senior Design Engineer at Samsung Electronics (1999–2005), Intel (2006), and Inphi Corporation (2007–2011), working on DRAM, cache memory, high-speed I/O, and mixed-signal circuits. His research focuses on low-power digital electronics, high-speed CMOS interconnects, and energy-efficient memory and multi-core architectures.