Martin Brooke
Associate Professor, and Philip Baugh Scholar Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Box 90291 Duke University Durham, NC 27708-0291 Phone: (919) 660-5504 |
Office: 3581 CIEMAS Building 3rd Floor in Fitzpatrick Wing Duke University Durham, NC 27706 |
Physical Delivery Address: Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering 129 Hudson Hall Corner of Science and Research Dr Duke University Durham, NC 27706 Phone: (919)-660-5252 |
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Martin A. Brooke received the B.E. (Elect.) Degree (1st. Class
Hons.)
from Auckland University in New Zealand in 1981. He received the M.S.
and
Ph. D. in Electrical Engineering from The University of Southern
California
in 1984, and 1988, respectively. He is currently an Associate Professor
of
Electrical Engineering at Duke University. Professor Brooke was
an Analog
Devices Career development award recipient from 1988-1993, won a
National
Science Foundation Research Initiation Award in 1990, the 1992 IEEE
Midwest
Symposium on Circuits and Systems, Myril B. Reed Best Paper Award, and
the
Georgia Tech Outstanding Thesis Advisor Award in 2003. He has graduated
seventeen
PhD students from his research group and has six U.S. patents
awarded.
He has published more than 120 articles in technical Journals and
Proceedings,
and articles on his work have appeared in several trade
publications.
Dr. Brooke is a member of the IEEE.
Professor Brooke's expertise is in multi-disciplinary, team-oriented
collaborative
research involving co-design and co-development of hybrid analog,
digital,
and optoelectronic information processing systems. He has
conducted
a research program in applications for ultra-compact optical sensors,
short-haul
and in-home optical data communications, real-time control, cost
effective
high performance and optoelectronic packaging, and predictive and
statistical
modeling of RF and optoelectronic passive and active components and
circuits
suitable for use in circuit design environments such as HSPICE and
HPADS.
Dr. Brooke's research enables both undergraduate and graduate students
to
design, build, and test integrated circuits and associated support
circuitry
(over 50 designs so far) that get used by our collaborators for such
exotic
purposes as chemical analysis and jet turbine combustion control.