Jan Madsen
DTU, Denmark
Liquid Computing
Abstract
A key turning point for the evolution of modern computers was the introduction of the general-purpose computer architecture which allowed the computer to be programmed after hardware fabrication. This allowed hardware to be designed bottom-up, providing a hardware independent programming interface which could then be compiled from a high-level programming language, effectively separating the design of hardware (processor) and software (application). Today, microfluidic Lab-on-Chip are still mainly developed as hardcoded applications using passive operations, even though microfluidic technologies have the potential to scale. In this talk we argue that such scaling will require active components and the ability to abstract basic operations to a level similar to that of classical computation, and presents a digital microfluidic-based general-purpose Lab-on-Chip that can be programmed after fabrication. We show that parallel execution of multiple protocols are possible, and that EDA tools for MPSoC can be adapted to solve and optimize protocol execution on digital microfluidic Lab-on-Chip, which we call liquid computing.
Biography
Jan Madsen is Full Professor in Computer-Based Systems and Head of Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science (DTU Compute). He holds a MSc in Electrical Engineering (1986, DTU) and a PhD in Computer Science (1992, DTU). His research interests are in the intersection between computer science and biotechnology, with a special focus on design, modelling, and construction of microelectronic (MPSoC and IoT), microfluidic (Lab-on-Chip) and microbiological (molecular) computing systems, including the development of design automation tools and design methodologies. In these fields, he has co-authored more than 200 peer-reviewed journal and conference papers, 3 books, 13 book chapters, and 3 patents. He has co-supervised 47 PhDs. He was the General Chair of DATE 2018, NOCS 2012, CODES 2001 and the Technical Program Chair of DATE 2007, CODES+ISSS 2011, CODES 2000. Dr. Madsen is a board member of EDAA, member of the Academy of Technical Sciences and its Council for Technology and Society. He was National ICT Expert for EU Horizon 2020. He is member of IEEE and ACM.
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