Power Electronics is intended to be an introductory text in power electronics, primarily for the undergraduate electrical engineering student. The text is written for some flexibility in the order of the topics. Much of the text includes computer simulation using PSpice as a supplement to analytical circuit solution techniques. Ned Mohan has been a leader in EES education and research for decades, as author of the best-selling text/reference Power Electronics with Wiley and a series of textbooks self-published under the MNPERE imprint. Mohan leads a consortium of 80+ universities working to revitalize electric power. About The Book: The text includes cohesive presentation of power electronics fundamentals for applications and design in the power range of 500 kW or less. It describes a variety of practical and emerging power electronic converters made feasible by the new generation of power semiconductor devices. MEDIA-ENHANCED THIRD EDITION. The first edition of this book was published in 1989 and the second edition in 1995. The basic intent of this edition, as in the two previous editions, is to provide a cohesive presentation of power electronics fundamentals for applications and design in the power range of 500 kW or less where a huge market exists and where the demand for power electronic.
Laboratories for Dissemination Purposes:
Initiated through a CCLI-EMD grant from NSF, and supported by NASA, ONR and now DOE, these laboratories have been commercialized through third parties, as required by the original NSF grant. They have been adopted in various combinations in over 100 U.S. universities and colleges. The details about acquiring them can be obtained through the following website: http://www.ece.umn.edu/groups/power/
1. Power Systems Laboratory
2. Power Electronics Labs
(a) Hardware Lab for Power Electronics
Power Electronics Hart Solutions
- Schematics of the Power Electronics Board (350 kB PDF)
(b) FPGA-based Control Board
(c) PSpice-based Lab for Power Electronics
3. DSP-Controlled Electric Drives Lab
Power Electronics Ned Mohan Pdf
These laboratories have been acquired by 106 U.S. Universities:
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