Scott Stanton

Also published under:S. Stanton

Affiliation

ANSYS, Inc., Canonsburg, USA

Topic

Reduced-order Model,Accuracy Loss,Column Vector,Electric Machine,Finite Element Analysis,Hybrid Electric Vehicles,Impulse Response,Left Singular Vectors,Rank Of Matrix,Singular Value,Singular Value Decomposition,State-space Model,Step Change,System Matrix,Temperature Distribution,Thermal System,Core Loss,Eddy Current Loss,Electric Vehicles,Interior Permanent Magnet,Mesh Size,Permanent Magnet,Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor,Singular Vectors,Thermal Model,Time-domain Model,Winding Loss,Accuracy Of Model,Amplitude Frequency,Angular Speed,Average Torque,Battery Thermal,Battery Thermal Management,Coefficients Of Variables,Constant Coefficient,Cubic Spline,Current Angle,Current Limitations,Dc Bus Voltage,Demagnetization,Dimensional Matrix,Electrical Cycle,Energy Loss,Engineering Design,Excellent Agreement,Finite Element Analysis Results,Flux Linkage,Fourier Analysis,Frequency Domain,Frequency Range,

Biography

Scott Stanton received the B.S. degree in electrical and computer engineering from Ohio University, Athens.
He has spent the past 13 years of his career at ANSYS/Ansoft working with customers throughout the U.S., Europe, and Asia in the modeling and simulation of electromechanical devices and systems such as motors and drives, solenoids, sensors, transformers, and actuators. He has authored/coauthored over a dozen papers covering diverse topics from the use of numerical methods for computational electromagnetics to multidomain modeling and simulation. Before joining Ansoft, he worked for six years with Westinghouse Electric Corporation in the Power Generation Controls Group as well as in the Industrial Automation and Drives Group.