Sign for Notice Everyday    Sign Up| Sign In| Link| English|

Our Sponsors


    Special Issue on Low-Voltage Low-Power Analogue Devices and Their Applications

    View: 424

    Website http://www.radioeng.cz/info/13-call-for-papers.htm | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category low-voltage low-power circuits: operational amplifier design; operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) design; current conveyors; voltage conveyors; CDBA, CDTA, CFTA, CIBA, DBTA, VD-DIBA, VDIBA, VDTA, etc.; MOS-only circuits; analogue filters; rectifiers; voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs); bandgap references; ADCs; sigma-delta modulators

    Deadline: December 15, 2012 | Date: June 01, 2013

    Venue/Country: Online

    Updated: 2012-09-03 20:33:01 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    Special Issues of Radioengineering

    A paper is requested being submitted online via Radioengineering journal submission system. The manuscript has to be prepared in MS Word for Windows or LaTex in Radioengineering Publishing Style.

    Due to the very short publication time, extreme care has to be devoted to the formal processing of the paper. A paper of an inadequate form might be rejected from that reason. An author is requested to submit a PDF version of the paper together with the MS Word document (or LaTeX archive and source files) in order to simplify handling the paper.

    Special Issue on Low-Voltage Low-Power Analogue Devices and Their Applications

    June 2013

    Guest Editors:

    Prof. Dr. Shahram Minaei (Dogus University, Turkey)

    Prof. Dr. Oguzhan Cicekoglu (Bogazici University, Turkey)

    Prof. Dr. Dalibor Biolek (University of Defense, Czech Republic)

    Dr. Norbert Herencsar (Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic)

    Dr. Jaroslav Koton (Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic)

    The subject of Low-Voltage Low-Power Analogue Devices and Their Applications for the special issue has been chosen due to the increasing requirement of designing efficient portable electronic systems in the industry. New process technologies provide facility to implement circuits in a smaller size and lower voltages. However, for analogue circuits higher biasing current is needed to obtain the same performance with low supply voltages which results in increasing of power consumption. On the other hand, lower biasing current restricts the dynamic range of the circuit, whereas with low supply voltages it is hard to keep all the transistors in saturation region. Thus, design techniques for low-voltage low-power operation of analogue circuits are needed. This special issue will deal with low-voltage low-power analogue devices and their applications.

    The following topics should be addressed in this issue:

    • low-voltage low-power operational amplifier design
    • low-voltage low-power operational transconductance amplifier (OTA) design
    • low-voltage low-power current conveyors
    • low-voltage low-power voltage conveyors
    • low-voltage low-power CDBA, CDTA, CFTA, CIBA, DBTA, VD-DIBA, VDIBA, VDTA, etc.
    • low-voltage low-power MOS-only circuits
    • low-voltage low-power analogue filters
    • low-voltage low-power rectifiers
    • low-voltage low-power voltage controlled oscillators (VCOs)
    • low-voltage low-power bandgap references
    • low-voltage low-power ADCs
    • low-voltage low-power sigma-delta modulators

    Manuscript submission:15 December 2012
    Notification of acceptance:15 March 2013
    Final manuscript submission:15 April 2013
    Special Issue release:1 June 2013

    Note: Please do indicate ?Special issue June 2013“ in the cover letter during the online submission.


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
    Disclaimer: ourGlocal is an open academical resource system, which anyone can edit or update. Usually, journal information updated by us, journal managers or others. So the information is old or wrong now. Specially, impact factor is changing every year. Even it was correct when updated, it may have been changed now. So please go to Thomson Reuters to confirm latest value about Journal impact factor.