Jerome Johnson Tiemann
General Electric
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Featured researches published by Jerome Johnson Tiemann.
Applied Physics Letters | 1970
William E. Engeler; Jerome Johnson Tiemann; Richard D. Baertsch
Surface charge was successfully transported by means of a series of overlapping conductor‐insulator‐semiconductor capacitor plates. The transport mechanism involves a field‐driven diffusionlike phenomenon which is analyzed theoretically, and the results are compared to experiments performed on simple structures.
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices | 1976
Richard D. Baertsch; William E. Engeler; Howard S. Goldberg; Charles M. Puckette; Jerome Johnson Tiemann
Some of the design considerations for charge-transfer split-electrode transversal filters are discussed. Clock frequency, filter length, and chip area are important design parameters. The relationship of these parameters to filter performance and accuracy is described. Both random and tap weight quantization errors are considered, and the optimum filter length is related to tap weight error. A parallel charge-transfer channel, which balances both capacitance and background charge, and a coupling diffusion between split electrodes greatly improves accuracy. A one-phase clock is used to simplify the readout circuitry. Two off-chip readout circuits are described, and the performance of two low-pass filters using these readout circuits is given. Signal to noise ratios of 90 dB/kHz and an overall linearity of 60 dB have been achieved with this readout circuitry.
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 1979
Frank Louis Lederman; Jerome Johnson Tiemann
A B-scan ultrasonic imager produces a rectilinear image and has a linear transducer array with only one switch per element. Individual elements or overlapping transmit subarrays are selected sequentially to generate pulses of ultra-sound. Received echo signals are sequentially sent down a long shift register delay line, are tapped off at the pulse repetition rate, and delayed by different amounts in the several channels and summed to effect time delay focusing of the echoes. The video output signal is post-processed to improve the TV monitor picture; interpolated image lines are conveniently derived with this architecture.
Journal of Applied Physics | 1972
William E. Engeler; Jerome Johnson Tiemann; Richard D. Baertsch
A two‐phase 14‐stage transfer shift register has been built and operated which uses the surface‐charge transistor structure to effect the transfer of signal charge from one stage to the next. This paper describes the structure and presents preliminary experimental results which characterize its operation as a digital shift register. The shift register is operated in both the complete and partial transfer modes. An analytical solution for the approximate equation of motion of charge under a single electrode plate has been obtained. A key result of the analytical solution is that the characteristic time for transfer of charge out of a full potential well is given by t0=L2/μ(V‐VT). A computer simulation of the 14‐stage shift register, using the analytical solution for a single stage, is in good agreement with the experimental results.
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices | 1971
William E. Engeler; Jerome Johnson Tiemann; Richard D. Baertsch
The surface-charge transistor (SCT) is a new active semiconductor device that can be used to store, transport, and control the transport of nonequilibrium surface charge. In its simplest (discrete) form, it consists of two adjacent storage electrodes and an overlapping control electrode. All of these electrodes are separated from each other and the semiconductor surface by a thin insulating film. This structure will provide storage and controlled transport of mobile surface charge along the semiconductor surface. Data are presented for both the quasi-static characteristics of this device and its transient response. The quasi-static data are compared with an analysis based on the solution of Poissons equation for the device, and the measured transient response is compared with a numerical solution of the equation of motion for surface-charge transport. The accuracy of these models is attested to by the agreement between theory and experiment. The fabrication of surface-charge transistor structures is also described.
IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 1972
William E. Engeler; Jerome Johnson Tiemann; Richard D. Baertsch
The authors present a surface-charge storage cell suitable for word-organized dynamic random-access memory and discuss its operation in a memory system. Experimental results and computer simulations of the readout process on a 4/spl times/8 array using this cell are given. A sensitive stable sense-and-refresh amplifier, suitable for use with this memory cell is also described. Simulations of a 4096-bit chip with a storage cell density of 2.5 mils/SUP 2//bit using this refresh amplifier predict a cycle time of 250 ns.
international solid-state circuits conference | 1980
Jerome Johnson Tiemann; T.L. Vogelsong; A. J. Steckl
A new charge-transfer device architecture has been developed for implementing recursive filters in the minority charge domain. A three pole filter using this architecture has been designed and fabricated. The measured filter characteristics are in close agreement with theoretical predictions to approximately 0.2 percent. The charge domain filter appears to retain the intrinsic CCD shift register advantages (e.g. high-speed, small output capacitance, wide linear dynamic range), while overcoming many of the disadvantages of the present CCD transversal filter architecture.
international solid-state circuits conference | 1971
William E. Engeler; Jerome Johnson Tiemann; Richard D. Baertsch
The surface-charge transistor (SCT) is an integrated-circuit element and involves a new concept for controlling the transfer of stored electrical charge along the surface of a semiconductor. The experimental transient response of a large-geometry SCT is presented. Linear high-density arrays of surface-charge transistors may be utilized to form digital or analog shift registers. The experimental performance of a 14-bit shift register, which has been operated in both these modes, is given. By forming these units in a serpentine fashion, charge (information) may be transported back and forth between refresh circuits to form an array of cells. An experimental circuit of this type is presented. Using these techniques a digital serial memory of high density may be constructed. Using standard metalization linewidths and tolerances a cell size of 2 mil/SUP 2/ per bit is shown to be feasible.
American Heart Journal | 1982
Mark Friedman; David J. Sahn; Steven Goldman; David R. Eisner; Norman C. Gittinger; Frank Louis Lederman; Charles M. Puckette; Jerome Johnson Tiemann
Two-dimensional echocardiography has been used to image the left main coronary artery. We have successfully imaged the left main coronary artery in 16 of 19 patients with left main coronary artery disease (LMCAD) and in 14 of 18 control patients using a dynamically focused 3-1/2 MHz experimental phased array sector scanner. Images were displayed with standard logarithmic compression grey scale allocation and with a modified antilog curve which enhances high intensity echoes. All of the 16 patients with LMCAD were identified from the antilog processed image. Only 1 of the 18 control patients had a false positive study. Modified antilog processed images provide high sensitivity (100%) and specificity (93%) for detecting LMCAD. This noninvasive technique could be used to screen patients for the presence or absence of LMCAD.
international solid-state circuits conference | 1977
William E. Engeler; Jerome Johnson Tiemann; Richard D. Baertsch; Howard S. Goldberg
As all the weighting coefficients of the filter are positive, a weighted charge quantity is collected by a line beneath one of the elementary electrodes of each weighting electrode. A charge reading device is coupled to the line and supplies an electrical signal which is transmitted to the negative input of a differential amplifier, which receives the sampled input voltage of the filter at its positive input. The electrical output signal of the filter is taken, under low impedance, at the output of the differential amplifier, said signal being reinjected at the input of the filter by the injecting means.