Waterloo Engineering professor Slim Boumaiza will be honoured at Rideau Hall in Ottawa tonight for his research on wireless communications networks with two industry partners.
Boumaiza, an electrical and computer engineering professor who heads the Emerging Radio Systems Group (EmRG), is one of 20 scientists and engineers to be recognized at a ceremony attended by Governor General Julie Payette and other dignitaries.
He is receiving a $200,000 research grant as the winner in one of four Synergy Awards for Innovation categories sponsored by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) for outstanding examples of industry-academia collaboration.
The award recognizes Boumaiza’s work with Ericsson Canada Inc. and Keysight Technologies Canada Inc. to find ways to build energy-efficient radio-communications systems that minimize the environmental impacts and operational costs of 4G infrastructure.
A citation by NSERC notes his research is paving the way for 5G, or fifith-generation, wireless networks, which involve “a combination of ingenuity and enterprise that can only be achieved by collaboration between industry and academia.”
In addition to setting the stage for 5G networks, it notes, Boumaiza and his industry partners are helping train the new engineers who will be at the forefront of wireless communications research and development in the future.
'Critical thinking and creativity'
Ericsson is described as an industry leader with networking equipment that serves almost 40 per cent of mobile traffic in the world.
Keysight produces electronic design automation software and test and measurement instrumentation used in almost two-third of all radiofrequency communication hardware design.
The event at Rideau Hall will honour the winners of NSERC’s six national prizes totalling $3.72 million.
“NSERC award winners have demonstrated their critical thinking and creativity to produce breakthrough findings in response to new but also timeless research questions,” said B. Mario Pinto, president of the council.
This article originally appeared on Engineering News.