Senior Photonic Mixed Signal Design Validation Engineer

NVIDIA NVIDIA · Semiconductors · Santa Clara, CA

This role is for a Senior Photonic Mixed Signal Design Validation Engineer at NVIDIA. The primary responsibilities involve developing validation test methods, interacting with multi-functional groups, characterizing optical and electrical performance, and debugging new builds. The role requires a Master's degree in a relevant field, deep understanding of optical components and analog circuits, RF testing experience, and strong programming skills for automation and data analysis. Experience with optical transceiver testing and wafer probe systems are considered advantageous.

What you'd actually do

  1. Develop validation test methods for new photonic builds from the Mixed-Signal Design group.
  2. Interact with multi-functional groups to support chip development and validation.
  3. Characterize fundamental optical, electro-optical, and RF performance of new chip builds.
  4. Validate, debug, and characterize new analog, photonic, electrical-optical, and mixed-signal builds.
  5. Provide feedback to designers on silicon performance, build quality, and margins.

Skills

Required

  • Master of Science in Electrical Engineering, Physics, Computer Engineering, or equivalent experience.
  • Deep understanding of fundamental optical components and analog circuits.
  • RF testing experience at die or module level.
  • 8+ years of experience measuring, analyzing, and debugging complex mixed-signal builds.
  • Experience with Python, Git, Matlab, or JMP.
  • Ability to code scripts for validation, debug, data analysis, and automation.
  • Consistent, persistent, and efficient.
  • Ability to work in a team environment.
  • Detailed knowledge of optical lab equipment.

Nice to have

  • Optical transceiver performance testing at high data rates.
  • Experience with control loops.
  • Working knowledge of wafer probe test systems and handling.

What the JD emphasized

  • 8+ years of experience measuring, analyzing, and debugging complex mixed-signal builds.