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Our research group uses several engineering design applications to drive research in simulation and optimization algorithms and software. Recent efforts have focused on the fundamentals of model-order reduction, matrix-implicit methods, and fast techniques for solving integral equations. The applications currently being examined to drive those fundamental investigations include design tools for integrated circuit interconnect, micromachined devices, aircraft, and biomolecules. In the sections below, we describe these activities in more detail.
1.
Numerical Techniques in Biomolecule Design and Systems Biology In order to design an effective drug or a biochemically-based sensor, it is necessary to develop ligand molecules that bind readily and selectively to receptors of interest. Electrostatic forces play an important role in the design of ligands, but the complicated three-dimensional geometry of the problem makes it difficult to assess the electrostatic fields and then optimize the ligand. We have been developing fast methods for the electrostatic analysis, and have been focused on three aspects. First, we have developed a fast analysis program based using a discretized integral equation formulations plus sparsification-accelerated iterative techniques. Second, we have coupled the electrostatic analysis with the ligand charge optimization problem using a Hession-implicit approach[1]. Finally, we have been developing improved discretizations of the molecular surface geometry using curved panels, and have developed approaches for computing integrals over curved panels[2]. 2. Techniques for Coupled Optimization and Simulation Sponsors
Project
Staff The enormous advances in both interior-point-based, convex optimization and fast methods for three-dimensional simulation are making development of design tools that perform automatic structural optimization much more feasible. We are developing strategies for coupling fast simulation and interior-point optimization for applications such as biomolecule design, nanophotonics, and optical semiconductor process inspection. Our approaches include using Hession-implicit methods in which the simulation and optimization occur in parallel [3] and strategies in which a detailed simulation model is used to generate a parameterized reduced order model [4,5,6]
3. Tools for Photonics in Integrated Circuit Design and Manufacturing Sponsors
Project
Staff Optical inspection, now the non-destructive, semiconductor process monitoring technique of choice, requires the solution of an inverse scattering problem to infer geometry from measured light. We have developed a new approach to accelerating this inverse scattering problem based on using parameterized model reduction [7]. The problem of analyzing optical effects in wavelength-sized structures also arises for developers of integrated nanophotonics, which is emerging as an important new technology. Nanophotonic designers have very few available tools, and we are beginning a project to improve the situation. We are developing approaches that can be used to extract circuit-level models of photonic devices [8,9] and are also developing new techniques for assessing the impact of roughness on the loss in photonic channels[10].
4. Numerical Techniques for Integral Equations Sponsors
Project
Staff Finding computationally efficient numerical techniques for simulation of three-dimensional structures has been an important research topic in almost every engineering domain. Surprisingly, the most numerically intractable problem across these various disciplines can be reduced to the problem of solving a three-dimensional potential problem with a problem-specific Greens function. Application examples include electrostatic analysis of sensors and actuators; electromagnetic analyses of integrated circuit interconnect and packaging; detailed analysis of frequency response and loss in photonic devices; drag force analysis of micromachined structures; and potential flow based aircraft analysis. Over the last fifteen years, we have been developing fast methods for solving these problems and have developed widely used programs such as FastCap (capacitance), FastHenry(magnetoquasistatics), FastLap (general potential problems), FastImp (full wave impedence extraction),and FastStokes (fast fluid analysis). Our most recent work is in developing higher order methods[11], methods that efficiently discretize curved geometries[12], methods that are more efficient for substrate problems [13], and methods for analyzing rough surfaces [14].
5. Design Tools for Bio-Micromachined Device Design Sponsors
Project
Staff Using micromachining for biological applications requires complicated structures such as mixers, separators, preconcentrators, filters, and pumps, and these elements are used to process biomolecules or biological cells. To accelerate the design of these complicated devices, new tools are needed that can efficiently simulate mixing and particle or cell motion in complicated three-dimensional flows. In addition, for microfluidic devices intended for use in molecular separation, the length scales are such that noncontinuum fluid effects must be considered, and therefore hybrid approaches that combine molecular and continuum models must be developed. Finally, the wide variety of structures being developed implies that generating models for system-level simulation will require efficient simulation combined with automated model extraction [15]. Our recent work in addressing these problems includes the development of efficient time integration techniques for cells in flow [16], techniques for accurately extracting diffusion constants from measurements[17], and efficient techniques for extracting models from detailed simulations [18]. 6. Modeling and Synthesis Tools for Analog Circuit Design
Sponsors MARCO Gigascale Systems Research Center, Semiconductor Research Corporation, National Science Foundation Project Staff B. Bond, K. C. Sou, J. White, A. Megretski, and L. Daniel
The presence of several nonlinear analog circuits and Micro-Electro-Mechanical MEM components in modern mixed signal System-on-Chips (SoC) makes the fully automatic synthesis and optimization of such systems a task extremely challenging. In order to address the problem we are developing a Platform Based Design Methodology for Analog RF and Mixed-Signal systems. An Analog Platform consists of a library of pre-characterized analog components that can be instantiated, interconnected and optimally sized to realize a given functional specification at the system level. In order to enable the large scale adoption of our methodology supporting tools are needed for both characterizing the libraries of analog components, and for instantiating and optimizing each component to realize a given functionality. Our initial efforts in this research activity focus on the library characterization by developing tools for the automatic generation, of "field solver accurate", and geometrically parameterized dynamical models of analog linear and nonlinear components. Specific contributions include parameterized modeling of interconnect bus structures [19, 20], RF inductors including displacement currents, skin and proximity effects [21], substrate, fullwave and distributed effects [4, 6, 22, 23], nonlinear circuits and MEMS [24]. References
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