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From 1985-95, he was a professor in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. He was also Associate Director of the Wisconsin Electric Machines and Power Electronics Consortium, the first university-industry consortium on campus that he helped to grow to include over 60 industrial sponsors.
In 1995, he started Soft Switching Technologies and as President, CEO and Chairman of the Board, he was responsible for raising venture capital funding from leading investors including GE Capital and JP Morgan Partners, for developing a line of power line disturbance monitoring and mitigation products to help factories avoid costly unscheduled downtime, and for positioning the company as a leader in this emerging market. From 2003-2004, he served as Chairman and Chief Technology Officer for the company, successfully transitioning company operations to an experienced management team.
He joined Georgia Tech in 2004 to create a strong program in the application of power electronics and related technologies to power systems and demanding defense and industrial applications. He holds 32 patents, has published approximately 200 technical papers, including over 12 prize papers, and has given many invited presentations at technical and business oriented meetings.
He is the director of Intelligent Power Infrastructure Consortium (IPIC), a university-industry-utility consortium that has been formed to provide a focal point for the academic teaching and research program in advanced power technologies at Georgia Tech. IPIC provides a mechanism to foster and accelerate the development and adoption of early-stage pre-competitive high-risk and high-impact technologies in power applications.