[ \tau \cdot I_d/W = C \cdot \left( \fracI_subI_d \right)^-m ]
After careful analysis, the core term is clearly . The remainder— "ehnicollian jrbrewspdf hot" —appears to be a corrupted string, possibly a mangled author name (e.g., Nicollian, E.H.), a reference to a famous textbook, or noise from OCR (Optical Character Recognition) or a search query glitch. "Nicollian" strongly points to E. H. Nicollian , co-author of the seminal book "MOS (Metal Oxide Semiconductor) Physics and Technology" (often cited as Nicollian & Brews, 1982). "Jrbrewspdf" might refer to J. R. Brews (the co-author), PDF, and "hot" perhaps indicating high-temperature effects or a popular/hot topic. [ \tau \cdot I_d/W = C \cdot \left(
It seems you are looking for an article based on a highly specific (and possibly garbled) keyword phrase: R. Brews (the co-author)