• WeChat official account for the department
    WeChat official account for undergraduate students of the department
    WeChat official account for graduate students of the department
    WeChat official account for alumni of the department
    WeChat official account for the Energy Internet Research Institute, Tsinghua University
    WeChat official account for the Sichuan Energy Internet Research Institute, Tsinghua University

清华大学电机系

清华大学电机系本科生

清华大学电机系研究生

清华大学电机系校友会

清华大学能源互联网创新研究院

People & Viewpoints

Current Location: Home > News > People & Viewpoints > Content

报告题目:Future Electronic Power Systems – A Virginia Tech Perspective

报告人: Dr. Dushan Boroyevich

University Distinguished Professor

Director of Center for Power Electronics Systems (CPES)

Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, U.S.A.

报告时间: 2017-11-2 9:30

报告地点: 西主楼2区203

联系人: 肖 曦

简介:Dushan Boroyevich received his Dipl. Ing. degree from the University of Belgrade in 1976 and his M.S. degree from the University of Novi Sad in 1982, in what then used to be Yugoslavia. He received his Ph.D. degree in 1986 from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech), Blacksburg, USA. From 1986 to 1990, he was an assistant professor and director of the Power and Industrial Electronics Research Program in the Institute for Power and Electronic Engineering at the University of Novi Sad. He then joined the Bradley Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Virginia Tech as associate professor. He is now University Distinguished Professor and Associate Vice President for Research and Innovation in Energy Systems at Virginia Tech, and Director of CPES.

Abstract – After a decade of premonition, it is becoming increasingly clear that the future human energy needs will be dominantly provided by electricity provided by renewable and distributed generation and delivered over electronic power “pipelines”. Moreover, modern electronic power distribution systems built for airplanes, ships, road and off-road vehicles, data-centers, industrial processes, and buildings, often comprise hundreds of electronic power converters, which is already challenging our basic understanding about how power systems are designed and operated. In order not only to cope with the trend, but to guide it instead, it is essential to develop innovative electronic power system architectures, new control concepts for the solid-state power substations, and methods that allow improved system integration and assessment of dynamic interactions.

—— Share ——

Previous:Toward Next Generation Tools for Modeling and Analysis of Evolving Energy Conversion Systems

Next:Development of Power Quality Analyzing Platforms

Close