ASPIRE Students Representing USU at IFEC 2025 Competition

Students and faculty group photo at ASPIRE
ASPIRE participants and advisors from the USU team selected to participate in the IFEC 2025 competition.

A team of students and faculty from ASPIRE at Utah State University has been accepted to participate in the final event of the International Future Energy Challenge (IFEC), which will be held in Taiwan this summer. Out of the twelve teams that participated in the semifinals in March, the USU team is one of eight that were selected to participate in the challenge final competition, with this year’s topic being creation of an isolated DC-DC converter with a fast transient response and low noise level.  

“We have a lot to accomplish in the next three months to complete the design and build the hardware,” said Bryce Hesterman, the engineering advisor of the team. “The contest topics are chosen to be somewhat difficult and it seems to me that the judges are looking for innovative solutions to the challenging requirements.” 

The team’s faculty advisor, Hongjie Wang, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at USU, is excited for his students to participate in this international competition as it’s a great opportunity for future professional careers. 

“Having the team entering the final stage means we have a really strong team from USU and ASPIRE, and it shows the strength of our power engineering group,” Wang added. “It also shows the strong support that we are providing to our students from ASPIRE, the ECE department, and College of Engineering, and demonstrates our effectiveness in undergraduate student training, student education, and engineering workforce development.” 

This undergraduate research team is comprised of team lead Josh Christiansen and team members Zac Bradley, Austin Hardy, and Cole Krmpotich, who are all electrical engineering majors at USU. Assisting this team are graduate student advisors Mckay Waite and Jaron Bono, who were both winners of previous IFEC competitions, with Hesterman and Wang as advisors. 

Hesterman said that the variety of expertise on the team — from industry to academic, students to advisors — has been valuable for everyone involved, and the students agree. 

“We have spent countless hours on this project, and to make it to the finals felt like all our hard work has paid off,” Bradley added. “We definitely understand the hardest part is not over, however. We don’t want to simply make it to the finals, we want to create a project that functions fully, is unique, and ultimately wins the competition.” 

IFEC is an annual international undergraduate student competition in power electronics and their design, implementation, and testing. The entire competition spans approximately nine months with an initial proposal stage, a semi-final stage, and the final stage, which is on-site in Taiwan. 

Learn more about the competition here, including the other teams

Contacts: 

Hongjie Wong

Electrical and Computer Engineering Professor 
Utah State University 

Bryce Hesterman

Principal Research Engineer 
Utah State University

Writer: 

Kayleigh Kearsley, 
Marketing & Communications Intern, 
ASPIRE