Students studying

Contact

Nathan Weise, Ph.D.

Name

Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Haggerty Hall 224
(414) 288-6193
nathan.weise@marquette.edu


Research Interests

  • Power Electronics
  • Power and Energy Conversion
  • Electric Drives
  • Vehicular Power Systems
  • High Voltage Direct Current Converters
  • Power Electronic Transformers
  • Control of Renewable Energy Sources
  • Control of Power Electronic Systems

Professional Preparation

Ph.D., 2011, Electrical Engineering, University of Minnesota
M.S., 2007, Electrical Engineering, University of Minnesota
B.S., 2005, Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota

Selected Recent Publications

Lance Doiron; Nathan Weise, "DQ Current Control of a Bidirectional, Isolated Single-Stage AC-DC Converter," in Proc. IEEE Applied Power Electronics Conference and Exposition (APEC) March 16-20, 2014

Nathan Weise, "DQ Current Control of a Bidirectional, Isolated, Single-Stage AC-DC Converter for Vehicle-to-Grid Applications," in Proc. IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting July 21-25, 2013

Nathan Weise; Kaushik Basu; Gysler Castelino; Ned Mohan, "A Single-Stage Dual Active Bridge Based Soft Switched AC-DC Converter with Open-Loop Power Factor Correction and Other Advanced Features," in IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics

Nathan Reimensnyder and Nathan Weise, ”Voltage Control of a Single Phase, Single-Stage, Isolated AC-DC Converter,” in Proc. IEEE Transportation Electrification Conference and Expo (ITEC), June 2013

Castelino, Gysler; Basu, Kaushik; Weise, Nathan; Mohan, Ned; , ”A bi-directional, isolated, single- stage, DAB-based AC-DC converter with open-loop power factor correction and other advanced features,” in Proc. IEEE International Conference on Industrial Technology (ICIT), pp.938-943, 19-21 March 2012

 

Prof. Nathan Weise

Campus Tours App

Nathan Weise graduated from University of Minnesota with a B.S. in Computer Engineering in 2005. He graduated with a M.S. in Electrical Engineering with an emphasis on wireless in 2007 from the University of Minnesota and graduated with a Ph.D. in electrical engineering with an emphasis in power in 2011 from the University of Minnesota. He has worked as electrical engineer at Cummins Power Generation and General Electric Global Research. He was a Assistant Professor at the University of Maine from 2011 to 2014. He joined Marquette University as a Assistant Professor in Fall of 2014. His current interests include electrification of transportation, control of renewable energy sources, wave energy converters, HVDC and smart grid.




Contact Us