
14 December, 2007
Carol Marsh’s EngD programme is funded by EPSRC and the FPGA High-Performance Computing Alliance (FHPCA), an alliance of high-tech organisations working to develop new computer solutions using FPGAs.
As part of the project, a new type of ‘supercomputer’ will be built. The project could revolutionise the development of applications to help with processing requirements in areas such as defence, medical imaging and mobile telecoms.
Marsh’s contribution to FHPCA, with her sponsoring company Algotronix, is research into novel technologies for the protection of design information sold as ‘IP cores' for FPGA chips.
With over 20 years’ design experience under her belt, Carol enrolled on EngD in autumn 2005, via a route that was very different to many other students. She has demonstrated that with the right skills, experience and motivation, EngD is viable for many engineers, and is not the sole reserve of ‘traditionally-qualified’ younger graduates.
After completing an HND at Napier University in the early 1980s, Marsh began her career with Marconi Instruments, Donibristle Industrial Estate. Following the completion a company sponsored MSc in Digital Techniques at Heriot-Watt University, and a career break to start a family, Marsh returned to work full-time and was promoted to increasingly senior technical positions.
In 1991, she started working as an FPGA engineer. Carol said “FPGA technology was very new at the time, and it was great to work in such a groundbreaking area. I found the work exciting and challenging; it sparked an interest and I knew it was an area I’d enjoy working in”.
Carol remained with the company, now Selex, as an FPGA engineer ‘troubleshooting’ on various projects until 2000, when she was headhunted by ECS Technology, South Queensferry to specialise in FPGA design. She also enrolled on ISLI’s MSc, gaining the postgraduate diploma with distinction-level grades while continuing to work full-time.
While investigating a project to complete the MSc, Carol heard about FHPCA, and the possibility of doing an EngD. Marsh said “It made sense to do the EngD – it was industry-based and I had so much experience to offer. I had considered a part-time PhD once I’d finished the MSc, but this opportunity was really exciting, it just seemed like an ideal solution”.
“Initially, I didn’t think I could apply; because I don’t have an undergraduate degree, but then I discovered that EngD values industry experience as well as formal qualifications. I talked it through with my tutors, and they convinced me to apply”.
Senior staff who interviewed Marsh for EngD could see that although she had not completed an undergraduate degree, her industry experience and MSc passes demonstrated that she had the right experiences for EngD research.
She was then selected for sponsorship by Dr Tom Kean of Algotronix who holds over 20 US patents in FPGA architecture and has published many papers on the applications of FPGA chips to computing problems.
Of her EngD experience to date, she says “The research work is beginning to grow, and working with Tom and my academic supervisor, Prof John Soraghan at Strathclyde University has been very rewarding. I’ve attended two major conferences, and plan to return next year to present on my work. So far, EngD has proved to be everything I hoped it would be.”
At the Award ceremony that honoured and recognised Sir Robin Saxby, chairman emeritus at ARM, for his major contribution to the UK's semiconductor design industry, the other award winners were:
Embedded System product of the year
Altera - Nios II C-to-hardware (C2H) acceleration compiler
Design application of the year
PicoChip Designs - Femtocell basestation reference design
R&D Award
Fractus - Fractal antenna-in-package technology
Distributor of the Year
Anglia Components
Manufacturer of the Year
Powerlase
Fabless Semiconductor Supplier
PicoChip Designs
Company of the Year
Joint Winners - Anglia Components and PicoChip Designs
Design & Test Product of the Year
Synplicity - TotalRecall, full visibility FPGA-based Asic prototyping
Passive & Electromechanical Product of the Year
Hypertac - HBB high current connector
Power Systems Product of the Year
Maxwell Technologies - HTM390 ultra-capacitor module
Clean Design Award
Ericsson Power Modules - employing life-cycle assessment of the energy impact of its products
Website Innovation Award
Vicor - PowerBench online power supply design tool
Start-up of the Year
XMOS Semiconductor
Semiconductor Product of the Year
Xilinx - 65nm Virtex-5 LX FPGA
Various sponsors included: Category sponsors: Gleichmann Sunrise, Sony, XJTAG, Intellect, Avnet, Hamilton Parker, Amplicon, RS Components, EPN Magazine, Anglia, Omron, Display Solutions,Varitronix, Azzuri Technology, Rapid Electronics, and International Rectifier.
Web: http://www.sli-institute.ac.uk/
Sponsor: http://www.algotronix.com/