Introduction
With a staff of about 30 fte faculty and over 180 fte scientific staff, the Department of Microelectronics combines the expertise of 7 research groups in Electrical Engineering. The complete field of electronics is covered, including signal processing, radar, and telecommunication.
Microelectronics is fundamentally a multi-disciplinary field of research, exploring the physics, materials and chemistry required to make devices work. It is also multidisciplinary with regard to its wide variety of applications, as it plays a crucial role in all fields of innovation, ranging from advanced health care to telecommunications and smart grids. The ever-increasing demand for processing power, sensing capabilities and miniaturisation makes microelectronics a highly innovative research field.
The Department is involved in several MSc tracks:
MSc Wireless Communication and Sensing, MSc Signals and Systems, MSc Microelectronics.
Research at the Department of Microelectronics
spans all major aspects of electronic
engineering including the design and development of
silicon-based devices, analogue and digital circuits for
smart sensors, biomedical implants and wireless
communication systems, signal-processing algorithms for
communication and biomedical signals, as well as microwave
and terahertz systems for remote sensing and radio
astronomy.
ME’s research
is a major contributor to a number of EEMCS themes:
The Department provides expertise for each of these
research areas, throughout the whole system chain, from the technology
layer to the sub -system and component layer and to the system layer,
with a direct link to the challenges facing today's society.
Episode 1 Up Close and Personal
Episode 2 New Frontiers
Episode 3 Connected Worlds

News

PhD Imad Bellouki received a Mosaic 2.0 scholarship (NWO)
Imad Bellouki(EI) has received a Mosaic 2.0 scholarship from the Dutch Research Council (NWO).

Dopplium and MS3 awarded Holland High Tech Grant for RADBAT Project
The project, titled RADBAT (Radar detection & tracking of bats in wind parks), will continue our development of an advanced radar-based system to monitor bats in wind farms and enable smarter turbine curtailment strategies.

Celebrating excellence in teaching: EEMCS Educators of the Year 2025
Ilke Ercan and Ioan Lager, department microelectronics, recognized for their distinct contributions to teaching
Agenda
- Thu, 4 Sep 2025
- 10:00
- Aula Senaatszaal
PhD Thesis Defence

Leiming Du
Sintering Fundamentals of Nano-Metallic Particle Interconnects
- Wed, 10 Sep 2025
- 17:30
- Aula Senaatszaal
PhD Thesis Defence

Adwait Inamdar
Digital twin-based health monitoring of microelectronics
- Thu, 18 Sep 2025
- 09:03
- Aula Senaatszaal
PhD Thesis Defence

Changheng Li
Multi-Microphone Signal Parameter Estimation in Various Acoustic Scenarios
Low Complexity Approaches Utilizing Temporal Information