LEES research areas include electronic circuits, components and systems,
power electronics and control, micro and macro electromechanics, electromagnetics, continuum mechanics (the
interaction of fields with fluids and other deformable media), high
voltage engineering and dielectric physics, manufacturing and
process control, and energy economics.
Faculty and
students
collaborate in carrying out
research projects
aimed at both the practical engineering objectives of the research
sponsors and at the underlying engineering sciences.
The laboratory’s extensive automotive electrical system research
program brings together experts in digital and analog circuit
design, simulation, electromechanics, micro-fabrication, power
electronics, electrochemistry and economics. Continuum
electromechanics, which brings together electromagnetics, continuum
mechanics and other disciplines, is what is often of concern in the
work with high voltage and insulation research. Many members of the
laboratory also participate in the Leaders for Manufacturing
Program, a joint activity between the Schools of Engineering and
Management.
Not only do projects often involve two or more research areas, but
they are also often carried out in collaboration with other MIT
laboratories or centers. For example, work in LEES on power
electronic devices and micromechanics is done in cooperation with
the Microsystems Technology Laboratory, and researchers working in
the areas of control and system identification frequently
collaborate with the Laboratory for Information and Decision
Systems. And LEES works with the Sloan Automotive Laboratory in the
Department of Mechanical Engineering on research related to
electronic control of engines and actuators.
Sponsorship of research in LEES comes from a variety of sources,
both national and international. Industrial sponsors account for the
majority of research funding, with the remaining coming from
electric utilities, the US Department of Energy and the National
Science Foundation. Students working in LEES develop a close
relationship with sponsors, and in the case of industrial sponsors,
often collaborate in their research with engineers and scientists at
the sponsoring company.