Power Quality & Resilience Laboratory

Month: March 2025

Congratulations to Doctoral Student Srijana Shrestha for Showcasing Her Research at the CERAWeek Conference

Doctoral student Srijana Shrestha attended the CERAWeek Conference hosted by S&P Global in Houston, Texas U.S. on the 10th to 14th of March 2025. She was selected along with three OU graduate students to represent the next generation of innovators in energy engineering.

Experience: “CERAWeek Conference is the biggest conference in the energy sector where business executives, industries, researchers and policy makers meet and share ideas about the future of energy. This year, I had the privilege of participating and connecting with professionals from around the world. It was an incredible experience to witness how AI is already making a significant impact in the energy industry, and I also enjoyed sharing insights from my own research during the poster session.”

Abstract:  With the increasing integration of intermittent energy sources on the electric grid, the demand for power system flexibility services has grown significantly to maintain a real-time balance between power supply and demand. This research explores the impact of flexibility services provided by motorized thermal energy storage on the lifespan of electric motors integrated into heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems that form a motorized storage system. However, the speed modulation or duty cycling required by flexibility services raises concerns about the lifespan-reducing accelerated aging of electric motors, potentially affecting equipment reliability and cost-effectiveness. This study examines the effects of aging under dynamic and distorted operating conditions caused by speed modulation to inform an aging-aware control strategy that balances the effects of aging and the financial gain from flexibility services.

Guest Speaker: Noah Gruman (Oklahoma Gas & Electric Corp.) Speaks in Protection Systems Class

A big thank you to Noah Gruman, who works at Oklahoma Gas and Electric Corp. (OG&E) as a Protection Coordination Engineer. He kindly volunteered to speak in Dr. Moses’ Power Systems Protection graduate class about his experiences in the power engineering industry.

Noah is a former OU Alum who worked in this group’s research lab and helped develop hardware for testing new forms of protection system relaying.

Students taking the class are also benefiting from protection relaying laboratory hardware that Noah helped build which is now being used for teaching and research.

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