PECM Issue 15 2015 | Page 101

Cummins’ partnership with the Royal Academy of Engineering: Professor Chris Gerada is the Director of the Cummins Innovation Centre and the Royal Academy of Engineering/Cummins Research Chair within the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Nottingham. He has been part of the Power Electronics, Machines and Drives group at Nottingham for 10 years, with a research focus on electromagnetic energy conversion in electrical machines and drives, concerned mainly with more-electric transport and distributed energy generation. so we could have that continuity. And it had what may well be the largest power electronics and machines group in the world.” The result of this change in philosophy has been the establishment of the Cummins Innovation Centre at the University of Nottingham and the appointment of Professor Chris Gerada to a joint Royal Academy of Engineering and Cummins Research Chair. The Centre provides Cummins with a range of world class facilities and a research community eager to explore and develop the real-world industrial applications, with the benefit of secured research continuity thanks to the clear focus of the Centre and its research groups. Dr Brown said that none of this would have been possible without the active support and sponsorship of the Royal Academy of Engineering. “On cost alone, it would have been difficult for us to justify were it not for the Academy backing,” he said “The Royal Academy of Engineering’s role in actively encouraging the setting up of centres of engineering excellence, and the keenness of the University of Nottingham to embrace the concept, have been crucial.” Measuring the impact The impact of the Cummins Innovation Centre at the University of Nottingham has been much greater than Dr Brown anticipated. “Initially, we expected to have a research portfolio that the academics would work on,” he said. In fact, the relationship with Professor Gerada and other academics at the centre has been much broader and more interactive than had been foreseen. “We now have a number of our fulltime employees spending time at the university, and we have students and researchers spending time with us in our facilities,” Dr Brown said. “We’ve been able to use their worldclass facilities for our research, and they’ve been able to benefit through greater opportunity to participate in projects with real-life applications. It’s becoming a seamless interaction between Cummins and the University. We have a symbiotic relationship which integrates the creative initiatives at Nottingham with the ambitions of Cummins in new products and they come to us when they’re drawing up their research plans to see how we can fit in with them.” There are range of different research project areas where Cummins is benefitting from the collaboration with Professor Gerada and his colleagues – including electrical machine topology, thermal analysis, machine prognostics and diagnostics, and integrating power electronics with electrical machines. Thanks to this collaboration and the additional funding that the establishment of a centre of excellence can bring there are always new projects on the horizon. “It’s quality research at the cutting edge,” said Dr Brown. “And the fact that we’ve got a channel to market through Cummins provides real value.” Future plans As a global company, when looking for a research partner, Cummins was particularly attracted to the University of Nottingham’s international outlook. “This has been a somewhat unforeseen bonus,” said Dr Brown. “Nottingham’s Ningbo campus in China is near our centres of particular strength in Shanghai and Wuxi and we’ve already sponsored two PhD students there.” “I think the Royal Academy of Engineering’s Research Chairs scheme is outstanding, and it’s commitment to engineering research is really commendable.” Dr Neil Brown Issue 15 PECM 101