GE welcomes project award for ‘Driving the Electric Revolution’ challenge

UK: GE Power Conversion welcomes a project award which will further its innovation in power electronics, electrical machines, and drives (PEMD) technologies.

 


Image source: GE Power Conversion

UK: GE Power Conversion welcomes a project award which will further its innovation in power electronics, electrical machines, and drives (PEMD) technologies.

The project, Reducing Footprint and Weight of High Power, Integrated PEMD, focuses on transformative design and novel manufacturing techniques to significantly increase power density of high-power electrification systems. Project lead GE Power Conversion will be supported by partners Dynex Semiconductor, the University of Nottingham, and Warwick Manufacturing Group.

The initiative is co-funded by industry and Driving the Electric Revolution, an ISCF Challenge delivered by UK Research and Innovation. The latest phase of the challenge, Supply Chains for Net Zero, focuses on strengthening critical PEMD capabilities that will help to enable industrial decarbonization.

Sectors like maritime, energy, infrastructure and process industries are turning to electrification technologies to meet their need for cleaner operational power and to support the drive towards net zero. Despite their scale, large ships and industrial applications often have significant space constraints that limit integrating new, electric microgrid equipment, like electric motors and advanced power electronics (PE), and new cleaner energy sources.

“Through transformative improvements in power density, we can help customers in the transition to electrification and decarbonization. It is an excellent opportunity for industry’s investment in next generation technologies to be accelerated through UK government support, and for the UK supply chain to continue to be world-recognized for its expertise,” explains GE Power Conversion’s Managing Director in the UK, Andy Cooper .

Work will be carried out at GE’s systems and manufacturing facilities in Rugby, UK, and its dedicated land-based marine test, emulation and innovation facility, MPTF, in Whetstone, UK. Partner facilities include the Power Electronics and Machines Centre at the University of Nottingham, which opened in March 2021.

 

Source: GE Power Conversion