Safety Sweep
Driving next to an 18-wheeler during a rainstorm last year, Kathryn Asad found herself in a dangerous situation. The rainwater sprayed up by the truck’s tires created a thick fog around her car, obscuring the road. She made it home safely but decided to figure out a way to minimize the risk.
Fortunately, Asad was in the perfect place to turn a challenging problem into an elegant solution. As a graduate student in industrial design at NC State, she’s immersed in a culture of “design thinking” – a process of taking simple ideas and moving them step-by-step to finished products.
Her innovative solution uses a vehicle’s compressor to feed a series of nozzles inside each wheel well. The nozzles blast jets of air onto the tires, creating an invisible curtain that dampens the spray of rainwater.
Her idea was smart enough to earn Asad first place in a student traffic safety contest at the New York International Auto Show this month.
“But when I went on stage to accept the award, they asked me not to mention the name of my school,” she said.
Almost a Clean Sweep
It turns out that the contest organizers were embarrassed that one university – NC State – had swept nearly every award in the competition, taking first, second, third and fifth place. Since the judging had been done “blind,” without the judges knowing the names or schools of the entrants, there was nothing sinister involved. Just skill.
The students’ professor in the College of Design, Bong Il Jin, was delighted with the strong showing. Jin worked with the students as they developed their ideas for the contest, driving them in the direction he believed would impress the judges. This was the seventh time NC State had entered the contest.
“We’re always looking for something that nobody’s thought of before, something that will give us a chance,” he said. “Even though we won most of the awards this year, it’s still challenging.”
View the students’ designs:
- First Place: Kathryn Asad – Curtair
- Second Place: Alex Bodnarchuk – Slipvision, a system that illuminates black ice so drivers can avoid the slippery patches.
- Third Place: Lance Cassidy – External airbags, mounted on the front and sides of cars and activated by motion sensors.
- Fifth Place: Ali Sutton-Settemi – Flexheat, a road surface system that uses solar energy to melt ice and snow.
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