Thomas Wei Chen, Ph. D

Affiliations: 
Electrical and Computer Engineering Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 
 Biomedical Engineering Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 
Area:
Design of VLSI (Very Large Scale Integration) Systems, Analog and Mixed Signal Circuit Design, Bioelectronics, Biosensors, CAD Methodology for VLSI, Low Power Circuit Design
Website:
http://bliss.colostate.edu/
Google:
"Thomas Chen CSU"
Bio:

Tom Chen is a Business Challenge Endowment Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and a core faculty member of the School of Biomedical Engineering (SBME). His research interest lies in the areas of large scale integrated systems for high density and high performance sensing and computation systems, analog and digital circuit design algorithms and low power implementations for biomedical applications, biosensors, and microfluidic devices. He has over 200 refereed publications and 4 patents in the related area of his research. Dr. Chen has also been a consultant for a number of Fortune 500 companies on designs of high performance circuits for a variety of applications.

Mean distance: (not calculated yet)
 

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Peter Denyer grad student 1984-1986 Edinburgh
John Mavor grad student 1984-1986 Edinburgh
David Renshaw grad student 1984-1986 Edinburgh
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Begly C, Ackart D, Mylius J, et al. (2020) Study of Real-Time Spatial and Temporal Behavior of Bacterial Biolms Using 2D Impedance Spectroscopy. Ieee Transactions On Biomedical Circuits and Systems
Tedjo W, Chen T. (2019) An Integrated Biosensor System with a High-Density Microelectrode Array for Real-Time Electrochemical Imaging. Ieee Transactions On Biomedical Circuits and Systems
Tedjo W, Nejad JE, Feeny R, et al. (2018) Electrochemical biosensor system using a CMOS microelectrode array provides high spatially and temporally resolved images. Biosensors & Bioelectronics. 114: 78-88
Schaffer M, Chen T. (1998) A Tree Matching Algorithm and VLSI Architecture for Real-Time 2D Object Classification Real-Time Imaging. 4: 193-202
See more...