
The听student team designed, built and tested a 1:8 scale model of their winning 易胜博官网 Coastal Wave-Powered Reverse Osmosis System in the 易胜博官网 wave tank.
A system that generates fresh water from the ocean 鈥 powered by the ocean 鈥攑ropelled an interdisciplinary team of 易胜博官网 students to third place in the national Marine Energy Collegiate Competition (MECC) hosted by the and the . The team of nine engineering and business students, advised by professor of mechanical and ocean engineering and professor of civil and environmental engineering , competed among 17 teams from across the nation.
The calls on multidisciplinary teams of undergraduate and graduate students to propose new ideas for marine energy to capture the power of the ocean. Marine energy has the potential to provide clean energy to remote and island communities and for applications such as ocean observation technology or desalination systems.
Joseph Camobreco 鈥22 (mechanical engineering) and Tori Sweet 鈥22 (environmental engineering) co-led the team. Additional members were Sam Williams 鈥22 (environmental engineering), Alexander Charest 鈥22 (mechanical engineering), Andrew LePage 鈥22 (ocean engineering), Devan Sack 鈥22 (civil engineering), Meaghan Wiggin 鈥22 (civil engineering), Chelsea Kimball 鈥18, 鈥23G (mechanical engineering) and Brendan Reagan 鈥24 (business).
鈥淭he students did a great job connecting across their disciplines and coming up with innovative solutions to difficult, real-world problems,鈥 says Bell. 鈥淭hey had a lot of enthusiasm; we just pointed them in the right direction and let them go.鈥
鈥淭he students did a great job connecting across their disciplines and coming up with innovative solutions to difficult, real-world problems.鈥
Their winning project, the 易胜博官网 Coastal Wave-Powered Reverse Osmosis System, aimed to produce fresh water for remote island and coastal communities with limited access to energy or fresh water. The inexpensive, easy-to-install design tapped the power of ocean waves to drive a hydraulic piston that pressurizes water and filters it through a reverse osmosis membrane.
The team wrote a 30-page techno-economic report and presented to an expert panel of judges recruited from marine energy industry professionals. The competition also included a poster presentation session and social events. The students analyzed market feasibility, outlined a research and product development plan, assessed risk 鈥 environmental, technical and societal 鈥 and conducted a detailed financial analysis for their product.
on Appledore Island served as a local case study for the feasibility of the project; other communities that could benefit include the Marshall Islands, Mauritius and other islands in the Gulf of Maine.
鈥淭he MECC is a great opportunity for students to get some real experience in marine energy,鈥 says Wosnik, who also leads the new Department of Energy-funded Atlantic Marine Energy Center. 鈥淭he MECC organizers are doing a great job connecting students to industry experts and providing relevant seminars and educational experiences throughout.鈥
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Written By:
Beth Potier | 易胜博官网 Marketing | beth.potier@unh.edu | 2-1566