Our Focus
To enhance power conversion systems through the creative application of new materials, mechanical integration, and power electronics operating at high frequency or high voltage.
Our Team
The Ludois Research Group, under the guidance of Dr. Daniel Ludois, is a close knit team that strives to push the boundaries of power conversion technology.
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Past Group Members (Alumni)
- Blake Rose, M.S. Spring 2022, “Galvanically Isolated Clamp-on Medium-Voltage Sensing,” employment after graduation: General Electric Global Research Center
- Michael Mayberry, M.S. Summer 2021, “Towards Electrostatic Levitation of Macroscale Rotating Machines,” employment after graduation: General Motors
- Peter Killeen, Ph.D. Fall 2020, “Current Source Inverters for Synchronous Electrostatic Machine Drives,” employment after graduation: C-Motive Technologies
- Max Liben, M.S. Spring 2020, “Analytical Design and Testing of a Self-Cooled, Toroidally Wound Ring Motor with Integrated Propeller for Electric Rotorcraft,” employment after graduation: Tesla Motors, then co-founded H3X
- Skyler Hagen, Ph.D. Fall 2019, “An Integrated Capacitive Brushless Excitation System for Wound Field Synchronous Machines Using Low-Cost Printed Circuit Boards,” employment after graduation: John Deere
- Aditya Ghule, Ph.D. Fall 2019, “Torque Modulation and Self-Sensing for Separately Excited Electrostatic Machines,” employment after graduation: C-Motive Technologies
- Ryan Knippel, Ph.D. Spring 2019, “Rotating Capacitors with Spiral Groove Features for Hydrodynamic Gap Maintenance in Power Conversion Systems,” employment after graduation: C-Motive Technologies
- Andy Schroedermeier, Ph.D. Spring 2019, “Integrated Inductors, Capacitors, and Damping in Bus Bars for dv/dt Filter Applications,” employment after graduation: Eaton Corporation
- Baoyun Ge, Ph.D. Spring 2018, “The Modeling, Design and Demonstration of Electrostatic Synchronous Machines,” employment after graduation: C-Motive Technologies
- Jiejian Dai, Ph.D. Fall 2017, “Power Electronics Design for High Power Capacitive Power Transfer,” employment after graduation: Monolithic Power Systems: MPS