Paper ID #33679ETHR-ENRG Smart Solar Project KitsMs. Danielle S. Washington, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Danielle Washington is a first year graduate student majoring in Information Technology at North Car- olina A&T State University. Danielle obtained her Bachelor of Science in Electronics/Computer Systems Engineering Technology from North Carolina A&T State University as well. She also obtained an As- sociate of Applied Science in Electrical/Electronics Engineering Technology from Guilford Technical Community College. She is a very perseverant, ambitious and analytical
Paper ID #33159A Model Passive Solar Home Student Design ProjectDr. Matt Aldeman, Illinois State University Matthew Aldeman is an Assistant Professor of Technology at Illinois State University, where he teaches in the Renewable Energy and Engineering Technology programs. Matt joined the Technology department faculty after working at the Illinois State University Center for Renewable Energy for over five years. Previously, he worked at General Electric as a wind site manager at the Grand Ridge and Rail Splitter wind projects. Matt’s experience also includes service in the U.S. Navy as a nuclear propulsion officer
Paper ID #33901Project-based Learning Approach in Teaching Power and Energy Engineer-ingCoursesDr. Radian G. Belu, Southern University Dr. Radian Belu is Associate Professor within Electrical Engineering Department, Southern University, Baton, Rouge, USA. He is holding one PHD in power engineering and other one in physics. Before joining to Southern University Dr. Belu hold faculty, research and industry positions at universities and research institutes in Romania, Canada and United States. He also worked for several years in industry as project manager, senior engineer and consultant. He has taught and developed
. Thompson has four years of industrial experience and served in the NC community college system for ten years. She has also served on the local business advancement team for six years. Dr. Thompson’s research interests are workforce development, engineering graphics and prototyping, and human factors in engineering. She has an Ed.D. from Liberty University, an Ed.S. from Northwestern State University of Louisiana, an M.S.T. from Western Carolina University, a B.S. from Appalachian State University, and an A.A.S. from Isothermal Community College. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Project Based Learning Program for Nuclear Workforce
, where he positively engages with numerous mechanical engineering advisees, teaches courses in mechanical engineering and sustainability, and conducts research in energy systems. Throughout his career, Dr. Kerzmann has advised over eighty student projects, some of which have won regional and international awards. A recent project team won the Utility of Tomorrow competition, outperforming fifty-five international teams to bring home one of only five prizes. Additionally, he has developed and taught fourteen different courses, many of which were in the areas of energy, sustainability, thermodynamics, dynamics and heat transfer. He has always made an effort to incorporate experiential learning into the classroom
has been achieved in successfully chairing ten or more graduate student culminating projects, theses, or dissertations, in 2011 and 2005. He was also nominated for 2004 UNI Book and Supply Outstanding Teaching Award, March 2004, and nominated for 2006, and 2007 Russ Nielson Service Awards, UNI. Dr. Pecen is an Engineering Tech- nology Editor of American Journal of Undergraduate Research (AJUR). He has been serving as a re- viewer on the IEEE Transactions on Electronics Packaging Manufacturing since 2001. Dr. Pecen has served on ASEE Engineering Technology Division (ETD) in Annual ASEE Conferences as a reviewer, session moderator, and co-moderator since 2002. He served as a Chair-Elect on ASEE ECC Division in
twenty years.The program of instruction includes a laboratory program that uses appropriate laboratoryequipment, kits, and a hands-on project to design, build, fabricate, populate, test, and iterate aDC/DC converter. Assessment summarizes nearly twenty years of successful instruction.IntroductionAlmost all electrical power in industrialized societies now is processed through at least onepower electronic stage. As such, electrical engineers (EE) often encounter power electroniccircuitry and systems when performing their routine duties. A knowledge of how these systemswork gives an EE an advantage in understanding and working with power of a nature that isprovided to every electrical system. As part of an innovative sequence of courses at
resilience in the event of power outages.In order to effectively mitigate any risk of losing power and productivity, major office buildingsusually have some sort of backup generation to sustain a business. Homes generally do not havea robust back-up power system, so when a person is working from home and the power goes out,productivity stops. Therefore, a new power grid solution is needed. Coming from the metricprefix atto, meaning 10-18, an atto-grid provides power to a singular room or section of roomwhich makes it even smaller than a picogrid. This atto-grid powers the typical load of a standard,single-person office: a printer, a laptop, a phone, and a lamp.The atto-grid project was proposed by Dr. Robert Kerestes from the Electrical and
suchas parallel plate capacitors and energy transmission devices such as cylindrical conductors.The second major objective is undergraduate research. In this paper, an undergraduate researchproject which took place over the summer of 2020 at the University of Pittsburgh as part of theMascaro Center for Sustainable Innovation’s undergraduate research program, will be discussed.In this project, undergraduate student researcher modeled an aluminum conductor, steelreinforced, transmission line conductor to verify its resistance, inductance, and capacitance. Thismodel will be the basis for artificial intelligence application training of transmission linemeasurements.The third major objective is to integrate this multiphysics tool into a junior level
Hampshire University. Served twenty years in the US Coast Guard as an Electronics Technician. Currently manages, develops, and instructs labs for Electrical Engi- neering and Cyber Systems and teaches cyber security to cadets at the US Coast Guard Academy. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Simulation and Validation of Battery Management SystemAbstract This paper presents the process and results of the simulation and validation of a batterymanagement system. The goal of this project is to design a battery management system andpower management system for use in a Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV). The system must becapable of seamlessly
biogas using anaerobic digestion. American c Society for Engineering Education, 2021 Food-to-Energy: A K12/University Partnership to Develop a Resource Recovery ProgramAbstractAn on-going, multi-faceted university/K-12 partnership, now in its third year, integrates aschool-wide food waste recovery program with classroom and extracurricular education inresource recovery. Pre- and post-consumer food waste from the high school and middle schoolcafeterias at a nearby K-12 school district is treated at an anaerobic digester system as part of anon-going University research project investigating the benefits of supplementing dairy farmdigester feed
materials. He participates in multiple projects, including the Development of a Model for The Metal Laser Powder Bed Fusion Additive Manufacturing Process. Dr. Ahmed Cherif Megri is currently the chair of the NCAT CAM’s Education subcommittee. He contributed to the outreach CAM since 2015.Dr. Sameer Hamoush, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Professor and Chair of Civil and Architectural Engineering DepartmentDr. Taher M. Abu-Lebdeh P.E., North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Dr. Abu-Lebdeh is a Professor of Civil Engineering, Chair of R&D for the NNSA/ MSIPP Consortium, and an Associate Editor for the American Journal of Engineering and Applied Sciences. His research
labs.Results suggest that each student gains experience building and running their own experiments,and they can explore interesting or unexpected observations at will without the time constraint ofa classroom lab schedule [6]. Further benefits include the ability for experiments to be tailored bythe teacher to meet student needs and the ability of laboratories to be readily shared betweenuniversities [7].Just as important, there is growing need for students to practice professional remote engineeringinteractions because industry has increasingly turned to remote and virtual workflows for reasonsincluding 1) increased complexity of tasks, 2) increased cost of equipment and software coupledwith short term project time frames, 3) the necessity of trained