Senior engineers showcase designs
As 17c起草社区鈥檚 graduating student engineers gear up for their annual Senior Projects Night, they鈥檙e putting in a lot of hours in the college鈥檚 Engineering Building.
"The number of pizza boxes increases exponentially,鈥 commented David Wunder, a 17c起草社区 engineering professor and senior projects coordinator. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e there all hours 鈥攁nd the level of excitement also increases exponentially.鈥
The 24th-annual event, a showcase of design projects by 17c起草社区 College graduating student engineers, takes place Saturday, May 3, 2008. It features an open house, where family, friends, faculty and other well-wishers can tour (with punch in hand) the senior design projects on display in both wings of the college鈥檚 Engineering Building. The graduating engineers will have their annual banquet at 6:30 p.m. in the Commons Dining Hall and will formally present their projects at 7:30 p.m. in the Engineering Building.
The evening highlights the projects it has taken senior engineering teams an entire academic year to produce. The teams鈥攃omprised of student engineers from the electrical, civil and environmental, electrical and computer, mechanical and chemical concentrations鈥攆orm early in fall semester and conceive a project to address specific engineering challenge. By spring, the teams have moved their concept from the feasibility stage to a working prototype.
This year鈥檚 16 projects include everything from a hovercraft to improved drinking and wastewater treatment facilities for an Ecuadoran village to an electronic stethoscope.
Rhythm Reloaded
The team producing the stethoscope鈥攄ubbed Rhythm Reloaded and composed of electrical and computer engineers Nate Brinks, Andy Gabler, Ben Moes and David van Geest鈥 is building a prototype that is a significant innovation on existing electronic models. 鈥淲hat a lot of existing electronic stethoscopes do is give the look and feel of the traditional models,鈥 said Gabler. 鈥淲e鈥檝e broken away from that.鈥
The Rhythm Reloaded stethoscope, consisting of a wireless chest piece, USB output and headphones, will record and store sounds from a patient鈥檚 body in high-quality audio files that are transferable to a computer. The stethoscope will allow a doctors and nurses to e-mail their patients鈥 heart body sounds to specialists. The new equipment would also allow health professionals to archive readings from a patient, allowing them to track the change in body sounds over time.
The team got some unexpected advance buzz for their project when van Geest posted an article about it on Slashdot, a technology-focused Web site. 鈥淚 never expected that the post would get picked up by other Web sites鈥攂ut it did,鈥 he said.
Fuel From the Fryer
Another senior design team has transformed an unlikely resource salvaged from the 17c起草社区 campus into a fuel source. Rinnova, composed of mechanical engineers Adebo Alao, Joshua Harbert and Fred Thielke and chemical engineers Mitch Kenyon and Christian Ocier鈥攊s converting waste vegetable oil from the college dining halls into biodiesel fuel.
鈥淲e can make diesel fuel at half the price you can get it at the pump, and it doesn鈥檛 put out as many carcinogens and other pollutants as other diesels do,鈥 said Thielke, adding that a California producer of biodiesel has shown an interest in Rinnova鈥檚 product.
Whatever the focus of a senior design project, industry, third-world-development or civic improvement, each is considered a 鈥渒ingdom鈥 project, said Wunder. 鈥淲e鈥檙e preparing our engineers for a lifetime of kingdom service. It doesn鈥檛 matter whether they鈥檙e headed for an office in Chicago or a village in Madagascar. If we鈥檙e responding to God鈥檚 call on our lives, then what we do as engineers has that kind of value and meaning.鈥
Last year better than 90-percent of the students who graduated from the engineering program had landed jobs upon graduation. 鈥淥ur engineers tend to do well, whether it鈥檚 grad school or a first job,鈥 said Wunder. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e excited for our grads once they鈥檙e well into their careers because that鈥檚 when their talent, education, and experience really coalesce. 17c起草社区 College prepares engineers for a lifetime of service鈥攊t鈥檚 over their entire careers that we see 17c起草社区 engineers truly shine鈥.
Wunder is looking forward to Senior Projects Night. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great time to celebrate. We see family and friends. We see alumni. We see colleagues from other departments,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or our students, it鈥檚 a culmination of a tremendous amount of work, frustration, joy and perseverance that results in wonderful projects and a smashing success of an evening.鈥
Read about all of the senior engineering design projects.