Georgia Tech’s ECE MS lets engineers dive into 12 technical areas—from Advanced Signal Processing and ML Hardware to Renewable-Energy Grids and Quantum Photonics. Students tape-out 14-nm ASICs in the cleanroom, design mmWave antennas in anechoic chambers, and model grid-forming inverters in the High-Power Lab. Corporate research centers from Apple to Keysight sit across the street.
CMOS neural-spike processor for sub-mW brain implants
GaN inverter topology for grid-tied solar storage
Photonic crystal modulator for on-chip LiDAR
Reconfigurable intelligent surface for 6G beamforming
Edge-AI accelerator ASIC using in-memory computing
Power-line communication scheme for microgrid coordination
Quantum-key-distribution transmitter on silicon photonics
Ultra-wideband radar for through-wall human presence detection
Low-power LoRa sensor node with energy-harvesting PMIC
Terahertz graphene antenna array for spectroscopic imaging
Digital twin of EV fast charger harmonics on distribution feeders
Near-field wireless power link for implantable glucose sensors
Secure hardware root-of-trust leveraging PUF arrays
FPGA-based SDR jammer detector for UAV swarms
Magnetic resonance coupling system for kilowatt EV dynamic charging
Engineer the circuits, signals, and systems that power a connected world.
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