Dr. Stijn Wielandt is a Research Scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the Climate & Ecosystem Sciences Division (CESD), working with Baptiste Dafflon in the Geophysics department. As an electrical engineer he develops and implements wireless communication technologies and environmental sensor systems.
In 2017 he obtained his Ph.D. degree in Engineering Technology from KU Leuven, Belgium, for his work on beam forming with phased antenna arrays and radio frequency propagation simulations for indoor localization systems. From 2011 till 2019 he worked at the Wavecore research group of KU Leuven, focusing on wireless communications, wireless power, and wireless localization technologies. Throughout his career in research, he worked as a visiting scholar at the UC Berkeley Wireless Research Center (California) and the Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences (Germany).
His research at LBNL focuses on the development of radio frequency technologies and wireless sensor systems for monitoring above-ground and subsurface hydrogeophysical properties. He works on low power wireless sensor networks, 5G and beyond-5G communication systems, embedded systems, and remote electromagnetic sensing.
Research Keywords & Expertise
Signal Processing
Embedded sensor system
Radio Frequency (RF) S...
Wireless & Sensor Syst...
Low power circuit desi...
Fingerprints
23%
Wireless & Sensor Systems
6%
Radio Frequency (RF) Sensing
Short Biography
Dr. Stijn Wielandt is a Research Scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the Climate & Ecosystem Sciences Division (CESD), working with Baptiste Dafflon in the Geophysics department. As an electrical engineer he develops and implements wireless communication technologies and environmental sensor systems.
In 2017 he obtained his Ph.D. degree in Engineering Technology from KU Leuven, Belgium, for his work on beam forming with phased antenna arrays and radio frequency propagation simulations for indoor localization systems. From 2011 till 2019 he worked at the Wavecore research group of KU Leuven, focusing on wireless communications, wireless power, and wireless localization technologies. Throughout his career in research, he worked as a visiting scholar at the UC Berkeley Wireless Research Center (California) and the Darmstadt University of Applied Sciences (Germany).
His research at LBNL focuses on the development of radio frequency technologies and wireless sensor systems for monitoring above-ground and subsurface hydrogeophysical properties. He works on low power wireless sensor networks, 5G and beyond-5G communication systems, embedded systems, and remote electromagnetic sensing.