Gage Hills
Profile
-
OrganizationStanford University
-
Telephone(not set)
-
ORCID(not set)
-
Google Scholar(not set)
-
ResearcherID(not set)
-
ScopusID(not set)
-
ResearchGateID(not set)
-
LinkedIn Profile(not set)
-
Twitter Account(not set)
-
Facebook Profile(not set)
-
Disability(not set)
-
Interests(not set)
-
Address(not set)
-
Hispanic Heritage(not set)
-
Biography
Gage Hills is a Ph.D. candidate in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, advised by Professor Subhasish Mitra and co-advised by Professor H.-S. Philip Wong. He received the M.S. Degree in Electrical Engineering from Stanford in 2012, and the B.S. Degree in Electrical Engineering & Computer Science from Yale University in 2007. From 2007 to 2010, he worked on the development of time-of-flight cameras, first at Canesta, Inc., in Sunnyvale, CA, and then at Microsoft, in Mountain View, CA, where he holds two patents; this technology is now released with the Microsoft Xbox1. In 2014, he worked at Intel, in Hillsboro, Oregon, in the Circuits Research Laboratory, developing hardware accelerators using Intel’s 14nm PDKs. In 2015, he worked at IMEC, in Leuven, Belgium, leveraging IMEC’s physical design tools and PDKs to evaluate and design digital VLSI circuits using carbon nanotubes at sub-10 nm technology nodes. His research highlights include the development of techniques for rapid co-optimization of processing and circuit design to overcome variations in carbon nanotube circuits; this work was nominated for a best paper award at the Design Automation Conference (DAC) in 2013. He also contributed to the development of the first digital sub-systems built entirely using carbon nanotube FETs (ISSCC, 2013), and to the demonstration of the first carbon nanotube computer, which was highlighted on the cover of Nature in Sept. 2013.