As a Franco-Moroccan power electronics engineer with 5 years of experience, I wanted to express my appreciation for your videos. Despite my professional background, I find your explanations incredibly insightful and beneficial. Your ability to clarify complex concepts is commendable, and your content is remarkably useful for professionals in the field. Keep up the excellent work Professor.
Hi Sir your work always helpful in all way.Sir I have a doubt ,Is there a way to do the simulation in LTspice and at the same time do the controlling part (coding part ) in matlab simultaneously both running at the same time to simulate a circuit.Is there a way to interface both ?
As a Franco-Moroccan power electronics engineer with 5 years of experience, I wanted to express my appreciation for your videos. Despite my professional background, I find your explanations incredibly insightful and beneficial. Your ability to clarify complex concepts is commendable, and your content is remarkably useful for professionals in the field. Keep up the excellent work Professor.
Wow. Thank you. Comments like yours keep me going. have an incredible Year.
Good job! Thanks a lot. Question! Do have any solution if I want to take into account the self-heating ?
Yes, you need to add a current source that represent the self heating power.
Kelvin is not expressed in degrees because it is unit of an absolute scale in contrast to centigrade or Fahrenheit, which are relative scales.
You think I should redo the video?
👍❤🙏
numero uno😊
Hi Sir your work always helpful in all way.Sir I have a doubt ,Is there a way to do the simulation in LTspice and at the same time do the controlling part (coding part ) in matlab simultaneously both running at the same time to simulate a circuit.Is there a way to interface both ?
I don't know about interface. But Qspice will accept a code that perhaps you can run in parallel with MATLAB.
Maybe ngspice is also worth looking at?
@@HansWurst-bk9sb Thanks man I'll look on to it!