About me

I am currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Automatic Control of Leibniz university of Hanover working on model predictive control applied to the management of multi-modal energy systems and the development of test environments for autonomous vehicles.

I was a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Automation and Applied Informatics (IAI) at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) in Germany, where I conducted hardware experiments at Energy Lab 2.0 to test and validate the angular droop control.

I graduated from the Department of Automatic Control at LTH, Lund university in Sweden, where I mainly worked on system- and control-theoretical solutions to frequency synchronisation in high-order oscillators and robust inverse optimality both applied to the study of inverter-based power system. I successfully defended my PhD thesis on January 28, 2022.


I received both my Bachelor and Master of Science degrees in Cybernetics Engineering (Technische Kybernetik) from the University of Stuttgart in Germany in 2013 and 2016. My university studies are founded on the understanding of dynamical systems and rooted in the mathematical theory of control.  I wrote my master thesis at the Automatic Control Laboratory of ETH Zurich on Grid-friendly Matching Control of Synchronous Machines by DC/AC converters in Bulk Power Networks.