On December 10, DTU held its sixth Conference on Electronics, Telecommunications and Electrical Automation to promote applied research and allow researchers, lecturers and Electrical Engineering students the opportunity to develop partnerships.
Dr. Anand Nayyar speaks on “The Internet of Vehicles (IoV): A futuristic smart intelligent transportation system
Dr. Ha Dac Binh, Dean of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, said: “The Conference on Electronics, Telecommunications and Electrical Automation is held annually to boost our applied research capacity, to provide an opportunity for discussion and academic exchange, to learn about the latest innovative Electrical Engineering technology and broaden the knowledge of our young research team even further.”
This year, the conference received several high-quality research papers from lecturers and other experts. The five best were selected for review and discussion. The content was very diverse, highly practical, with real-world applicability. Topics included “A robot with magnetic wheels to improve steel bridge quality control”, “An amplify-and-forward relay transmission system to uplink to on-orthogonal multiple access networks”, “Development trends in nuclear energy - an important factor in climate change?” and “New potential energy sources in Vietnam”. Some of the papers will be published in the DTU Journal of Science & Technology (ISSN: 1859-4905).
Dr. Anand Nayyar gave a talk on “The internet of Vehicles (IoV) - A futuristic smart, intelligent transportation system”. He introduced the concepts of the Internet of Vehicles (IoV), route-planning technology methods and the challenges that researchers must overcome to make IoV more efficient and reliable. Then he discussed “6G mobile communication networks: their future, key issues and governing technologies”. Dr. Nayyar gave an analysis of the technical requirements, advantages and challenges concerning the future realization of 6G, such as maximized throughput speed, improved energy efficiency, universal connectivity, new theories and technology, self-synthesizing communication systems and some non-technical challenges.
Mr. Truong Van Truong speaks at the conference
The Scientific Council highly appreciated the presentations of the lecturers and experts from the Faculty of Electrical Engineering. Mr. Pham Quyen Anh’s talk about “A robot with magnetic wheels to improve steel bridge quality control” in particular provided solutions to reduce the difficulties and dangers inspectors face when using robots to verify steel bridge quality, and the resulting increased productivity. Mr. Nguyen Thanh Binh’s talk on “Development trends in nuclear energy, an important factor in climate change?” argued that nuclear energy will be in important factor in combating climate change, pointing out the advantages, disadvantages and challenges of nuclear energy. Several compelling questions were asked and experts made specific comments and suggestions to the speakers.
The sixth Faculty of Electrical Engineering conference was highly significant because it encouraged and promoted more in-depth research by the faculty’s lecturers. It also gave them the opportunity to exchange information, have discussions and come up with some new and innovative ideas.
(Media Center)