Structure

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edacentrum is an independent institution geared towards promoting research and development in the electronic design automation (EDA) industry. Founded by the German microelectronics industry, it was funded during its early years by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). As shown in the diagram below, it consists of an association (edacentrum e.V.) and a limited-liability company (edacentrum GmbH).

edacentrum Structure Supervisory Board Stering committee Association edacentrum GmbH company Management Committee

edacentrum e.V.

The edacentrum association is a non-profit organisation that operates on behalf of its members and the projects supported by it, as well as actively engaging in public relations regarding EDA matters. The association is directed by a management board, consisting of a chairman, vice chairman and treasurer . The management board is controlled by the supervisory board and advised by the Steering Committee.

edacentrum GmbH

The edacentrum GmbH company was founded in September 2004 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of edacentrum e.V., to provide individual services to the EDA sector on a commercial basis. This economic activity assures the permanent existence of the association and its range of services. The chief executive officer of the edacentrum GmbH is Boris Strohmeier.

Supervisory Board

The supervisory board determines the overall objectives of the association and appoints and supervises the management board. It comprises leading industrial companies that have a high level of engagement in microelectronics in Germany. These companies currently include AUDI AG, Microchip Automotive GmbH & Co. KG, Infineon Technologies AG, Robert Bosch GmbH. Members of the management board and the spokesman of the steering committee are guest  members of the supervisory board.

Spokesman of the Supervisory Board

Hartmut Hiller

 

 

Spokesman for the Supervisory Board
Hartmut Hiller,
Infineon Technologies.

 

Technical Advisory Board

The Technical Advisory Board (formely steering committee) provides technical guidance for the edacentrum. It includes representatives from the microelectronics and EDA industries, as well as from small and medium-size enterprises, industry federations and research institutes. Its task is to define research topics, plan projects, and review projects. The members of the management board are also associate members of the Technical Advisory Board. Delegates of funding organisations may also be guest members of the Technical Advisory Board.

Composition of the Technical Advisory Board

The current spokesman for the Technical Advisory Board is Wolfgang Nebel, who is also chairman of the management board.

Management Board

The edacentrum is headed by a management board, whose members have an individual responsibility for different edacentrum business divisions.

Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Nebel

Chairman of the management board

Wolfgang Nebel

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Wolfgang Nebel holds a Dipl-Ing. degree in Electrical Engineering from Hanover University and a Dr.-Ing. degree in Computer Science from Kaiserslautern University. From 1987 to 1993, he initially worked as a software developer, later as a project manager and finally as head of CAD software development at Philips Semiconductors in Hamburg, now NXP. In 1993, he was appointed Professor of Integrated Circuit Design at the Department of Computer Science at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. He was Dean of the Department of Computer Science from 1996 to 1998 and Vice President Research at the University of Oldenburg in 2001 and 2002. From 1998 to 2022, he was a member of the Board of Directors of the OFFIS Institute for Computer Science, an affiliated institute of the University of Oldenburg. From June 2005 to June 2020, he was Chairman of the Board of OFFIS.

At the University of Oldenburg, Prof. Nebel taught and researched in the field of novel design methods and tools for embedded systems. He is particularly interested in new technologies for reducing energy consumption and increasing the robustness of information and communication systems. He has published more than 300 papers in this field. Prof. Nebel is co-founder of several start-up companies in the IT sector, a Fellow of the IEEE, a member of the German Academy of Science and Engineering (acatech) and a member of numerous professional associations, advisory boards and committees.

Vice chairman of the management board

Prof. Dr. Ulf SchlichtmannUlf Schlichtmann, Technische Universität München (TUM)

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Ulf Schlichtmann (born 1964) studied electrical engineering and information technology at TUM, where he subsequently received his PhD for a thesis on logic synthesis for FPGAs. From 1994 to 2003, he held various technical and management positions at Infineon Technologies AG (until 1999: Siemens AG, Semiconductor Division). Most recently, he was responsible for the "Design Libraries" department (standard cells, SRAMs, I/Os incl. ESD structures) at Infineon. Since 2003 he has been head of the Chair of Electronic Design Automation at TUM. From 2008 to 2011 he was Dean of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at TUM.

Ulf Schlichtmann conducts research on methodology and automation of the design of complex electronic circuits and systems. Since several years, his research also addresses emerging technologies and architectures (photonics, microfluidics, neuromorphic computing). He has published more than 300 scientific papers on these topics. Ulf Schlichtmann is a member of various advisory boards as well as the German Academy of Science and Engineering (acatech).

Prof. Dr. Holger Blume

Treasurer

Holger Blume,
Institute for Microelectronic Systems (IMS)
Leibniz University Hanover

Holger Blume studied electrical engineering at the University of Dortmund, where he also completed his doctorate with distinction in 1997. From 1998 to 2008, he worked as a senior academic advisor at RWTH Aachen University, where he habilitated in 2008 in the field of model-based design space exploration for architectures for digital video signal processing. Since July 2008, he has headed the Institute of Microelectronic Systems at Leibniz University Hannover and is Professor of Architectures and Systems. Since 2021, he has also been Vice President for Research and Transfer at Leibniz University Hannover.

His research interests are in the field of algorithms and architectures for digital signal processing applications in biomedical engineering and electronic driver assistance systems.

He is Chairman of the German section of the IEEE Solid State Circuits Society and a member of the Steering Board of the DFG Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all.