NEW: Please click here to download a PDF version of the ESSDERC program

Please click here to download a PDF version of the session schedule.

For a complete listing of the sessions, please visit the online session index.

You may also search here for a particular paper (using the paper ID number).

Authors: Please note that the session codes may be different from the ones indicated in your acceptance notice. The session codes currently displayed on the web site are valid.

A number of high-quality Plenary Sessions are scheduled where distinguished invited speakers will discuss issues of interest for the attendees of both Conferences:




Georges Gielen (KU Leuven)
Design Methodologies and Tools for Circuit Design in CMOS Nanometer Technologies

Karl McGoldrick (Polymer Vision)
Mobile Friendly Rollable Displays

Henry Baltes (ETH Zürich)
From Microsystems To Biosystems

Clark T.-C. Nguyen
(University of Michigan)
Integrated Micromechanical Circuits for RF Front-Ends


Ken Uchida (Toshiba Advanced LSI Laboratory)
Single Electron Transistors and Circuits for Future Low Power LSI


Tadahiro Kuroda (Keio University)
Low-Power Inter-Chip Wireless Communication


Mark Lundstrom (Purdue University)
Nano-Transistors: A Bottom-Up View

Reinout Woltjer (Philips Research)
An Industrial View on Compact Modeling

George Bourianoff (Intel Corporation)
Options and Opportunities for Beyond CMOS Logic Technologies


Special Session Invited Speakers


Satoshi Inaba
(Toshiba Corporation)
FinFET: the prospective multi-gate device for future SoC applications

Gerhard Knoblinger (Infineon Technologies)
Multi-Gate MOSFET Design

Gianluca Piazza (University of Pennsylvania)
AlN Contour-Mode Vibrating RF MEMS for Next Generation Wireless Communications

Abstracts of the talks and biographies of the invited speakers will be posted shortly.



20 September 2006 (Wednesday) 19:30
Casino Montreux Salon Deauville


Swiss Origins of Very Low-Power Integrated Circuits (Download Slides)

by Eric A. Vittoz, EPF-Lausanne

The search for electronic watches has been the cradle for early developments of very low-power integrated circuits in Switzerland.
Bipolar technology used for the first realizations was soon replaced by low-voltage CMOS, with first working chips as early as 1968. The speaker was involved in these actions since the very beginning in 1962. He will evoke the main steps along the first 20 years of this technological epic, using photographic documents. He will conclude with the present and possible future impact of these early developments.