Thomas Noulis
Thomas Noulis is an Assistant Professor in the Physics Department at Aristotle University, in the Electronics Laboratory. From 2012 to 2015, he worked with INTEL Corp., as a Staff RFMS Engineer, in the Mobile & Communications Group in Munich-Germany, where he specialized on 14nm & 28nm design, modeling/characterization, crosstalk and in SoC product active area minimization & migration. Before joining INTEL, from May 2008 to March 2012, Dr. Noulis was with HELIC Inc, initially as Analog/RF IC...See more
Thomas Noulis is an Assistant Professor in the Physics Department at Aristotle University, in the Electronics Laboratory. From 2012 to 2015, he worked with INTEL Corp., as a Staff RFMS Engineer, in the Mobile & Communications Group in Munich-Germany, where he specialized on 14nm & 28nm design, modeling/characterization, crosstalk and in SoC product active area minimization & migration. Before joining INTEL, from May 2008 to March 2012, Dr. Noulis was with HELIC Inc, initially as Analog/RF IC designer and then as an R&D Engineer specializing in substrate coupling, signal and noise integrity and analog/RFIC design. Thomas Noulis holds a B.Sc. Degree in Physics (2003), a M.Sc. Degree in Electronics Engineering (2005), and a Ph.D in the "Design of signal processing integrated circuits" (2009) from Aristotle Univ. of Thessaloniki, Greece and in collaboration with LAAS (Toulouse-France). From 2004 to 2009, he participated as a principal researcher in multiple European and National research projects related to Space Application and Nuclear Spectroscopy IC design; simultaneously, from 2004 to 2010, he also collaborated as a Visiting/Adjunct Professor with Universities and Technical Institutes. Dr. Noulis is the main author of more than 40 publications, in journals, conferences and scientific book chapters. He holds one French and World patent. His work received more than 50 citations. He is an active reviewer of multiple international journals and has given multiple invited presentations in European Research Institutes on crosstalk and Rad-IC design. Dr. Noulis has been awarded for his research activity by conferences and research organizations and can be reached at t.noulis@gmail.com. See less