Pouyan KeshavarzianPouyan received his B.Sc. and M.Sc. in electrical engineering both from the University of Calgary in 2015 and 2019, respectively. From 2013-2016 he was with Garmin Canada working on hardware design of low power IoT radio modules and fitness sensors. From 2016-2018 his research was focused on microwave circuits for active phase-conjugating systems. Recently, the research from that work was published in IEEE TMTT. His current focus is on photon counting circuits and systems for high-speed quantum random number generation. This involves device, mixed-signal, and system design in DSM CMOS.
Xia LiuBrief Bio: Xia Liu received her Ph.D. in Institute of Microelectronics from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, in 2017. From September 2012 to October 2013, she was a visiting student in University of California at Berkeley. From August 2017 to October 2018, Dr. Liu was entitled as a Wen H. Ko Fellow at Case Western Reverse University (USA). Currently, she is a researcher scientist in Microsystems laboratory, EPFL. She has demonstrated outstanding effort to research and explorations in micro/nanoscale devices and integrated systems, both at the frontiers of fundamental device physics and toward cutting-edge micro/nanotechnologies for emerging applications. She has authored or co-authored more than 10 peer-reviewed journal papers during last two years. With her PhD dissertation titled “Cardiomyocyte-Driven Energy Harvester and Ultrahigh Piezoelectric Nanofibers”, she received the “Tsinghua University Excellent Doctoral Dissertation Award, First Prize” in 2017. She also received the title of Excellent Ph.D. Graduate of Beijing in 2017. Her current research interest is focused on micro energy harvesting, advanced fabrication of 2D materials, devices and applications.
Andrada Alexandra MunteanAndrada Alexandra Muntean has received the B.Sc. degree in Applied Electronics from "Politehnica" University of Timișoara, Romania, in 2015, and the M.Sc. degree in Microelectronics from Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands, in 2017. She is currently working towards her Ph.D. in the AQUA Laboratory at EPFL. Her main research interest is to develop SPAD based CMOS image sensors and circuits for biomedical applications, mainly for time-of-flight positron emission tomography.