Field-programmable analog array: Difference between revisions

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In 2005 Fabian Henrici worked with Joachim Becker to develop a switchable and invertible OTA which doubled the maximum FPAA bandwidth.<ref name="9 Becker">{{cite journal|title=A Continuous-Time Hexagonal Field-Programmable Analog Array in 0.13 µm CMOS with 186MHz GBW|citeseerx = 10.1.1.444.8748}}</ref> This collaboration resulted in the first manufactured FPAA in a [[130 nanometer|0.13&nbsp;µm]] [[CMOS]] technology.
 
In 2016 Dr. Jennifer Hasler from Georgia Tech. university designed a FPAA system on a chip that uses analog technology to achieve unprecedented power and size reductions.<ref name="11 Hasler">{{cite document|title=A Programmable and Configurable Mixed-Mode FPAA SoC, Jennifer Hasler et al., Georgia Tech., January 7, 2016|doi=10.1109/TVLSI.2015.2504119|s2cid=14027246}}</ref>
 
==See also==