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Hussain Al-Rizzo
Also published under:Hussain M. Al-Rizzo, H. M. Al-Rizzo, H. Al-Rizzo
Affiliation
Department of Systems Engineering, University of Arkansas at Little Rock, Little Rock, AR, USA
Topic
Internet Of Things,Antenna Array,Internet Of Things Applications,Action Recognition,Activity In Order,Actuator,Antenna Performance,Axial Ratio,Bandstop Filter,Channel Capacity,Channel Model,Circularly Polarized,Circularly Polarized Antenna,Collision Probability,Common Ground,Cycle Period,Daily Activities,Data Packets,Decision Table,Defected Ground Structure,Delay Values,Dielectric Constant,Dipole Antenna,Diversity Gain,Duty Cycle,Effect Of Sensor,Envelope Correlation Coefficient,Feature Subset,Flat Earth,Free-space Wavelength,GHz Band,Hidden Problem,Impedance Bandwidth,Impedance Matching,Internet Of Things Devices,Internet Of Things Systems,Internet Of Things Technology,Left Side,Left-handed Circularly Polarized,Level Of Consistency,Linearly Polarized,MIMO Antenna,Medium Access Control,Medium Access Control Layer,Medium Access Control Protocol,Metrics In Order,Mm In Length,Mm In Width,Model-based Approach,Monopole Antenna,
Biography
Hussain Al-Rizzo received the B.Sc. degree in electronics and communications, the Postgraduate Diploma (High Hons.) degree in electronics and communications, and the M.Sc. (High Hons.) degree in microwave communication systems from the University of Mosul, Mosul, Iraq, in 1979, 1981, and 1983, respectively, and the Ph.D. degree in computational electromagnetics, wireless communications, and the global positioning system from University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada, in 1992. From 1983 to 1987, he was with the Electromagnetic Wave Propagation Department, Space and Astronomy Research Center, Scientific Research Council, Baghdad, Iraq. In 1987, he joined the Radiating Systems Research Laboratory, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, University of New Brunswick. He has eight years of industrial experience with EMR Microwave Technology Corporation, Fredericton, NB, Canada, from 1990 to 1998, where served as a Senior Systems Engineer, and a Manager of the Electromagnetic Modeling Group. Areas of industrial expertise include radio telescopes, application of high-power microwave heating technology to the Canadian heavy-oil industry, extraction of precious metals, agriculture products, remediation of oil spill, and design of antennas for precise GPS surveying and cellular systems. In 2000, he joined the Systems Engineering Department, University Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR), where he is currently a Professor of Telecommunication Systems Engineering. He has published over 200 peer-reviewed journal papers and conference proceedings, four book chapters, and two patents. He served thirteen years in academia (two years in the Sultanate of Oman, six years in Canada, and five years in Iraq). His research areas include implantable/wearable antennas, wireless systems, smart antennas, 4G LTE-A, WLAN/MIMO deployment and load balancing, electromagnetic wave scattering by complex objects, design, modeling and testing of high-power microwave applicators, precipitation effects on terrestrial and satellite frequency reuse communication systems, field operation of NAVSTAR GPS receivers, data processing, and accuracy assessment, effects of the ionosphere, troposphere and multipath on code and carrier-beat phase GPS observations, and the development of novel hybrid Cartesian/cylindrical FDTD models for passive microwave components. He was a recipient of the Best Doctoral Graduate Award in Science and Engineering by the University of New Brunswick, the prestigious Ted and Virginia Bailey Foundation, University of Arkansas at Little Rock Faculty Excellence Award in Teaching, in 2007, and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Faculty in Research in 2009. He is the Founding Director of the UALR’s Antennas and Wireless Systems Research Laboratory, the Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Computing and Network Technology, and an Associate Editor of the Journal of Online Engineering Education. From 2005 to 2007, he was a member of the Technical Advisory Committee of the International Microwave Power Institute.