NCREPT welcomes Con Edison of New York

Con Edison

NCREPT is happy to announce that Consolidated Edison of New York is joining as a member. Consolidated Edison Company of New York (Con Edison), a regulated utility, provides electric service in New York City (except for a small area of Queens), and most of Westchester County. It provides natural gas service in Manhattan, the Bronx, and parts of Queens and Westchester. Con Edison also owns and operates the world’s largest district steam system, providing steam service in most of Manhattan. Con Edison is a subsidiary of Consolidated Edison, Inc., one of the nation’s largest investor-owned energy companies, with approximately $13 billion in annual revenues and $29 billion in assets.

NCREPT welcomes Electric Cooperatives of Arkansas

AECC

NCREPT welcomes Electric Cooperatives of Arkansas as one of its newest members. Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corporation (AECC), based in Little Rock, is proud to provide power for about 460,000 members of Arkansas' 17 electric distribution cooperatives. Long considered one of the top generation and transmission cooperatives in the nation, AECC has assets of about $1.1 billion and annual energy sales of about $468 million. AECC provides power to its members - the 17 electric distribution cooperatives - through its diverse generation assets, which include three hydropower plants; three natural gas/oil-fired plants and two natural gas-fired-only plants.

Dr. Roy McCann to receive the 2008 John Imhoff Outstanding Teacher Award

Dr. Roy McCann

University of Arkansas' Honors and Awards Committee has selected Dr. Roy McCann to receive the 2008 John Imhoff Outstanding Teacher Award. It is the highest award given in each category by the University. The awards will be presented at the College of Engineering Alumni Awards Banquet on April 10th at the J. Q. Hammond Convention Center in Rogers. Dr. McCann joined the faculty of the Department of Electrical Engineering in 2003, and since then, he has made many contributions towards integrating engineering theory and practice for undergraduate students both within the classroom and through various design-oriented activities with practical applications. His research interests include decentralized and embedded control systems; sensor networks; transportation systems and automotive electronics; and electronic machine controls and power electronic drives.

AEP CEO Mike Morris visits University of Arkansas

Mike Morris at the UofA

AEP CEO Mike Morris fielded questions about coal, nuclear, renewable energy, climate change and the environment during "The Future of Energy" University Listening Tour at the University of Arkansas. Other questions touched on carbon capture technology, distributed generation, net metering and energy efficiency. The March 10 event was the second stop on a tour of six campuses aimed at engaging university students in a discussion about the future of American energy sources. It was sponsored by AEP, University of Arkansas' National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission (NCREPT) and College of Engineering. Article Courtesy of AEP Southwestern Electric Power Company.
Download Full Article here

NCREPT welcomes ROHM

ROHM

"I would like to announce that the Japanese electronics company ROHM (http://www.rohm.com) has joined the National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission – A Center for Advanced Power Electronics (http://ncrept.eleg.uark.edu)" according to Director, Prof. Alan Mantooth. ROHM joins American Electric Power SWEPCO, Arkansas Energy Cooperatives Corporation, Arkansas Power Electronics International, Electric Power Research Institute, Oklahoma Gas & Electric, and Southwest Power Pool as new members of NCREPT in 2007.

Power Systems Professor Opening at NCREPT and EE Department

ENGR

The Electrical Engineering Department at the University of Arkansas and NCREPT invites applications for tenure-track faculty positions at the Assistant Professor and Associate Professor levels for Fall 2008. [For more details, click here.]

NCREPT welcomes APEI as a member

APEI

The University of Arkansas is pleased to announce that Arkansas Power Electronics International Inc. (APEI) has joined NCREPT. APEI, Inc. is a small R&D firm with over $2 million in annual revenues from federal, state, and private contracts. APEI, Inc. comprises of 23 employees, including 4 Ph.D's who are experts in all facets of power electronics engineering.

Introduction

Welcome to the University of Arkansas' National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission (NCREPT) homepage. This research center is currently located in Engineering Hall 117, but will soon move to its new building in the Arkansas Research and Technology Park at 2055 South Innovation Way. NCREPT is directed by Dr. Alan Mantooth. NCREPT consists of four faculty and 14 graduate students. The center is involved in five areas of research that impact the realization of power electronics solutions:

  • Power electronic design and modeling
  • Control algorithms for power electronics
  • Power electronics packaging
  • Power electronics test
  • Mixed-signal integrated circuit design for the drive and control of power electronic interfaces

Objectives

The primary objectives of the project are in Design, Packaging, and Test of Advanced Power Electronics. Specifically, the objectives are:

  • To research and develop prototypes of advanced power electronics systems for applications in the power grid including both solid-state protection devices and energy storage
  • To develop advanced packaging solutions for high current, high voltage power semiconductor devices and applications
  • To establish a state-of-the-art test facility for advanced power electronic circuit and package designs for distribution-level voltages (15 kV-class) and high currents (300 A)
  • To provide much needed human resource in the form of educated students for the newly emerging technologies of the power utility and power electronics sector