EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021
(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)
2/27/2018 | 10:50 AM - 11:40 PM | Wireless Vehicle to Grid Systems – Recent Technological Advances | Summit A
Wireless Vehicle to Grid Systems – Recent Technological Advances
Recent introduction of bidirectional IPT (BD-IPT) technologies not only improve system efficiency and flexibility, but also enables wireless Vehicle to Grid/Grid to Vehicle (V2G/G2V) services. These services, which are expected to become an integral part of future EV charging infrastructure, include the absorption of power variances produced by renewable energy sources, reactive power injection for grid voltage regulation and harmonics absorption for improved power quality. Overall, such services can further enhance the use of renewable energy sources, while also providing an additional revenue stream for EV owners.
The first part of this presentation intends to introduce widely reported bi-directional inductive power transfer (BD-IPT) systems along with a comparison. This will be followed by a discussion on latest technological developments, including details of BD-IPT systems that are also capable of providing grid services. The presentation will conclude highlighting current challenges and future directions.
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Presenters/Authors
Duleepa J Thrimawithana
(), The University of Auckland, d.thrimawithana@auckland.ac.nz;
Duleepa J. Thrimawithana, received his BE in Electrical Engineering (with First Class Honors) in 2005 and his Ph.D. in power electronics in 2009 from The University of Auckland, New Zealand.
From 2005 to 2008, he worked at Tru-Test Ltd. as a Research Engineer and was involved in designing and developing high-voltage pulse generators. He joined the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The University of Auckland in 2009 where he currently works as a Senior Lecturer. He also serves as the Chairman of the Joint Chapter of IEEE IES and IAS, New Zealand (North). He has co-authored over 100 journal and conference publications, and holds 15 patents on wireless power transfer technologies. In recognition of his outstanding contributions to engineering as an early carrier researcher, Dr. Thrimawithana received the Jim and Hazel D. Lord Fellowship in 2014. His main research areas include wireless power transfer and power electronics.
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