skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: High-speed PiN photodiode design space exploration to break the speed-efficiency trade-off
Award ID(s):
2329884
PAR ID:
10513197
Author(s) / Creator(s):
;
Editor(s):
Osiński, Marek; Arakawa, Yasuhiko; Witzigmann, Bernd
Publisher / Repository:
SPIE
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Proc. SPIE 12880, Physics and Simulation of Optoelectronic Devices XXXII
ISBN:
9781510670204
Page Range / eLocation ID:
46
Subject(s) / Keyword(s):
Si-PiN CMOS compatible high-speed detection speed-efficiency trade-off
Format(s):
Medium: X
Location:
San Francisco, United States
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Ellis, K.; Ferrell, W.; Knapp, J. (Ed.)
    There is no doubt that there is an increase in the penetration of electrical energy into the operation of high-speed railway systems (HSR). This is even more pronounced with the increasing trends in smart electric multiple units (EMU). The operational speed serves as a metric for punctuality and safety, as well as a critical element to maintain the balance between energy supply and consumption. The speed-based regenerative energy from EMU’s braking mode could be utilized in the restoration of system operation in the aftermath of a failure. This paper optimizes the system resiliency with respect to the operational speed for the purpose of restoration by minimizing the total cost of implementing recovery measures. By simultaneously valuating the dual-impact of any given fault on the speed deterioration level from the railway operation systems (ROS) side and the power supply and demand unbalance level from the railway power systems (RPS) side, this process develops an adaptive two-dimension risk assessment scheme for prioritizing the handling of different operational zones that are cascaded in the system. With the aid of an integrated speed-based resilience cost model, we determine the optimal resilience time, speed modification plan, and energy allocation strategy. The outcome from implementing this routine in a real-world HSR offers a pioneering decision-making strategy and perspective on optimizing the resilience of an integrated system. 
    more » « less
  2. Algorithms with predictions is a recent framework that has been used to overcome pessimistic worst-case bounds in incomplete information settings. In the context of scheduling, very recent work has leveraged machine-learned predictions to design algorithms that achieve improved approximation ratios in settings where the processing times of the jobs are initially unknown. In this paper, we study the speed-robust scheduling problem where the speeds of the machines, instead of the processing times of the jobs, are unknown and augment this problem with predictions. Our main result is an algorithm that achieves a $$\min\{\eta^2(1+\alpha), (2 + 2/\alpha)\}$$ approximation, for any $$\alpha \in (0,1)$$, where $$\eta \geq 1$$ is the prediction error. When the predictions are accurate, this approximation outperforms the best known approximation for speed-robust scheduling without predictions of $2-1/m$, where $$m$$ is the number of machines, while simultaneously maintaining a worst-case approximation of $$2 + 2/\alpha$$ even when the predictions are arbitrarily wrong. In addition, we obtain improved approximations for three special cases: equal job sizes, infinitesimal job sizes, and binary machine speeds. We also complement our algorithmic results with lower bounds. Finally, we empirically evaluate our algorithm against existing algorithms for speed-robust scheduling. 
    more » « less