Agilent Technologies and Tyndall National Institute at University College Cork have opened a state-of-the-art laboratory for research and teaching in next-generation wireless communications.
The new laboratory will enable advanced training and research on radio frequency integrated circuits for high-speed wireless data communications for video applications and contactless sensors for biomedical and security applications.
The laboratory is named after the 1909 Nobel prize-winning Italian scientist, Guglielmo Marconi, who moved to Ireland in to carry out his research.
“We welcome the €800,000 investment from Agilent and the Higher Education Authority of Ireland, in the Marconi Laboratory at Tyndall,” said Kieran Drain, CEO Tyndall National Institute. “This laboratory houses the latest industry-standard equipment and will ensure that the research team and students led by Dr. Domenico Zito continue the excellent work in emerging RF Communications at Tyndall.
Tyndall researcher and Science Foundation Ireland Stokes Lecturer, Dr. Domenico Zito, said: “Having a laboratory equipped with a unique set of Agilent instruments for high-frequency, low-noise measurements up to 110 GHz is of great value to our researchers and students. We are very grateful to Agilent for their donation in CAD tools and instruments and the HEA) investment in establishing the Marconi Lab as a worldwide centre of excellence in low-noise, high-frequency measurements.”
The equipment in the lab includes a four-port PNA-X with ultra-low-noise receiver and five extension modules; a signal source analyzer with microwave down-converter and six extension modules; a millimetre-wave source module; and a small arsenal of very expensive cables, devices and units, up to 110 GHz.