What participants say …
Hoopla Rack, third place and $4,000, 2008 Schoofs Prize for Creativity; third place and $700, Tong Prototype Prize; and Younkle Best Presentation Award “Through the whole process, I actually began to see my design turn into a prototype, and now my prototype might actually become a patented reality. By the end, I was so happy that I had chosen to take a chance on myself and do something that brought my engineering and hooping life together.” —Danielle McIntosh “I thought of this product two years ago—I wrote it down and kind of forgot about it for awhile. And I realized that if I didn’t do it, I’d always regret it, so I just decided to pursue it. The competition is a great outlet for anyone interested in innovation and development. The experience gives you the tools to develop the idea and the confidence to continue.” —Daniel Gartenberg Innovators in the news …
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The Schoofs Prize for Creativity
Summary of the 2006 CompetitionAn inexpensive, modular solar-energy technology that could be used to heat water and generate electricity won $12,500 and took first place in both the Schoofs Creativity, Tong Prototype competitions, held Feb. 9 and 10 during Innovation Days on the UW-Madison College of Engineering campus.
An inexpensive, modular solar-energy technology that could be used to heat water and generate electricity won $12,500 and took first place in both the Schoofs Prize for Creativity and Tong Prototype Prize competitions, held Feb. 9 and 10 during Innovation Days on the UW-Madison College of Engineering campus. In a package about the size of a small computer desk, the winning system uses a flat Fresnel lens to collect the sun's energy and focus it onto a copper block. Then a unique spray system removes the energy from the copper block and converts it into vapor, says inventor Angie Franzke, an engineering mechanics and astronautics senior from Omro, Wisconsin. The vapor either heats water for household use or powers a turbine to generate electricity. Current solar-collection systems use mirrors configured in either a parabolic trough or dish shape to collect and reflect solar energy, says Franzke. In contrast, her invention uses a thin, flat Fresnel lens to refract energy onto a small area, increasing the device's efficiency. In addition, Franzke's spray system, which was inspired by technology developed by Mechanical Engineering Assistant Professor Tim Shedd, removes heat in one less step than the current method.
Shedd's course, "Elementary Heat Transfer," piqued Franzke's interest in renewable technologies. Now, after she earns her bachelor's degree in December, she hopes to attend graduate school and continue improving her invention via her research. While the competition gave her the opportunity, with Shedd's encouragement, to pursue her idea, it also taught Franzke something about how to build it. “I had never machined before,” she says. “That's a skill I think is very useful. Also, prototyping is very integral to the design process. You didn't know if something would work until you tried it.”
The invention and prototyping competitions featured 16 teams comprised of 52 students. Judges awarded prizes to those student ideas and inventions they deemed most innovative and most likely to succeed in the marketplace. Other Schoofs Prize for Creativity winners include:
Other Tong Prototype Prize winners include:
In addition, Nick O'Brien, William Leffert and Dan Kuehn received the $1,000 Younkle Best Presentation Award for their inventions, the FlexiGobo and Light Target, both accessories that add additional features, including projected images and accuracy of placement, to theatrical lighting design without replacing conventional lighting fixtures. Matthew Younkle, a competition alumnus and current president of Y Innovation, LLC, and president and CTO of Laminar Technologies, LLC, sponsors the award.
Tim Miller received the $1,000 Sorenson Design Notebook Award for his group's invention, the Biomass Shredder. With applications in countries such as Rwanda, Africa, where deforestation affects wood availability for fuel, the invention is a bicycle-powered device that shreds surplus biomass, resulting in quicker decomposition of organic waste that subsequently can be composted and pressed into fuel briquettes. Competition alumnus Chad Sorenson, a founding principal of Sologear Corp. and founder of Fluent Systems, LLC, sponsors the award. Chemical engineering alumnus Richard J. Schoofs sponsors the Schoofs Prize for Creativity; Electrical and Computer Engineering alumnus Peter P. Tong (via the Tong Family Foundation) sponsors the Tong Prototype Prize. |
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The college thanks Richard Schoofs (BSChE `53), chairman of Schoofs Inc., for his creativity and generosity in sponsoring the annual Schoofs Prize for Creativity. The Tong Prize is made possible by a generous gift from the Tong Family Foundation (UW-Madison alumni Peter and Janet Tong).
An activity of the UW-Technology Enterprise Cooperative. Copyright 2008 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System Content by innovation@engr.wisc.edu Date last modified: Friday, 10-Feb-2006 00:00:00 CST Date created: 10-Feb-2006 |