Jens Trommer received the Dipl-Ing. Degree in electronic and sensor materials from TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Freiberg, Germany in 2011 and the Dr.-Ing. Degree in electrical engineering from TU Dresden, Dresden, Germany in 2017. Currently, he is holding the position of a Senior Scientist at NaMLab, gGmbH in Dresden, Germany, leading the emerging devices development team. His research interest focusing on doping free nanowire and nanosheet devices and its circuit applications.
The Emerging Devices research group at NaMLab is developing novel doping-free transistor technologies as add-on functionalities for classical CMOS. The research ranges from material science and basic physics, electrical characterization towards modelling and circuit design. The targeted applications for the new devices are aimed in neural network computing, hardware security, analog signal processing and quantum electronics.
Reconfigurable Field Effect Transistors are an emerging class of electronic devices that can be co-integrated into classical CMOS. The electrical characterization of transfer and output characteristics is vital to analyze and model their device behavior. As part of this internship thesis, a measurement setup should be used based on a scripting-based language (XML) that gathers RFET device data for many test structures with different geometrical parameters (e.g.: width, gate lengths, and number of contacts). Core-performance indicators like Ion/Ioff ratio or threshold voltage should be extracted and evaluated.
From June 9 to August 31, 2025 (adjustable at the discretion of the organisation)