Czech Technical University in Prague
Department of Electrotechnology
http://technology.feld.cvut.cz:8080/xwiki/bin/view/K13113/?language=en
Technická 2 166 27 Praha 6, Dejvice, Czech Republic
Prof. Pavel Mach
Mach(at)fel.cvut.cz
Engineering education has a long tradition in the Czech lands. One of its founders, Christian Joseph Willenberg, addressed a petition to Emperor Leopold I. in January 1705, asking permission to begin teaching engineering sciences. Leopold's son, Emperor Joseph I., who succeeded his father on Habsburg throne, responded to this request on 18th January 1707 with a decree in which he ordered the Czech general Estates to found an engineering school in Prague. Today (in the 2012/2013 academic year), about 24 000 students studied at CTU, and about 1,500 academic workers taught and carried out research at the university.
The Department of Electrotechnology has several laboratories and classrooms, in which our accredited subjects are taught and in which research activites are ongoing. Main research fields of the Department are: quality and reliability, their time dependence and influence on the different parameters of a products; methods of investigation of reliability; application of different mathematical methods of dispersion analysis and methods of factorial experiments; physics of failures; typical failures of electronics components; some methods of diagnostics of failures of electronic materials and components; measurement of noise and nonlinearity of electronic components and their relationship to the reliability; the quality loop; certification and accreditation of quality; steps of certification, responsibility; statistical production control (SPC) and its application in electronic production; testing and processing of data for the use in SPC; electromagnetic compatibility; photovoltaic systems.
http://technology.feld.cvut.cz:8080/xwiki/bin/view/K13113/?language=en
Technická 2 166 27 Praha 6, Dejvice, Czech Republic
Prof. Pavel Mach
Mach(at)fel.cvut.cz
Engineering education has a long tradition in the Czech lands. One of its founders, Christian Joseph Willenberg, addressed a petition to Emperor Leopold I. in January 1705, asking permission to begin teaching engineering sciences. Leopold's son, Emperor Joseph I., who succeeded his father on Habsburg throne, responded to this request on 18th January 1707 with a decree in which he ordered the Czech general Estates to found an engineering school in Prague. Today (in the 2012/2013 academic year), about 24 000 students studied at CTU, and about 1,500 academic workers taught and carried out research at the university.
The Department of Electrotechnology has several laboratories and classrooms, in which our accredited subjects are taught and in which research activites are ongoing. Main research fields of the Department are: quality and reliability, their time dependence and influence on the different parameters of a products; methods of investigation of reliability; application of different mathematical methods of dispersion analysis and methods of factorial experiments; physics of failures; typical failures of electronics components; some methods of diagnostics of failures of electronic materials and components; measurement of noise and nonlinearity of electronic components and their relationship to the reliability; the quality loop; certification and accreditation of quality; steps of certification, responsibility; statistical production control (SPC) and its application in electronic production; testing and processing of data for the use in SPC; electromagnetic compatibility; photovoltaic systems.