
Kara Wittman 鈥25 and Will Weete 鈥24 test their winning Drift-RMT in the wave tank in Chase Ocean Engineering.
A team of 易胜博官网 engineering and business students has won the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 2024 with a device that harnesses wave power as a reliable power source for ocean data collection buoys. It was the second consecutive year that a Wildcat team won first place in this national university competition.
The 12-member team won for Drift-RMT, a renewable ocean data collection device that harnesses wave motion for self-sustaining power. Their innovation could extend the battery life of at-sea drifter buoys that collect valuable ocean and climate data by several years.
鈥淢arine听energy resources are abundant, predictable and have immense potential to provide clean energy to our grid and the offshore economy,鈥 said Jeff Marootian, principal deputy assistant secretary for energy efficiency and renewable energy. 鈥淭he students participating in this competition are paving the way for this burgeoning new industry, and we look forward to their future achievements.鈥
Competing against 16 other teams at the Pacific Ocean Energy Trust鈥檚 Ocean Renewable Energy Conference in Portland, Oregon, the 易胜博官网 team also won the competition鈥檚 business plan and technical design challenges. And they might need a bigger trophy shelf: This spring, Drift-RMT won the $15,000 Paul J. Holloway Prize Competition and the top ocean engineering honor at the Undergraduate Research Conference.
鈥淧articipating in the MECC was truly transformative,鈥 said team member Kara Wittman 鈥25, noting that it shaped her professional aspirations and showcased the power of teamwork. 听
鈥淚t was great to see the team come together around this idea and to watch iterations of the device being built and tested in the 易胜博官网 wave tank,鈥 said team mentor Martin Wosnik, professor of mechanical and ocean engineering and director of the Center for Ocean Engineering. 鈥淐hase Ocean Engineering Laboratory provides the students with an ecosystem of support related to all things ocean, and the students really started to camp out here in the spring semester.鈥
Wosnik is director of the Atlantic Marine Energy Center (AMEC), a partnership of several East Coast universities funded by the Department of Energy. , professor and chair of civil and environmental engineering, also mentored the students.
Drift-RMT team members are mechanical engineering majors William Moore 鈥24, Matthew Carlson 鈥24, Riley Desmarais 鈥24, Nate Hixon 鈥24, William Lindsay 鈥24 and Will Weete 鈥24; environmental engineering majors听Jack Kearing 鈥24, Kara Wittmann 鈥25 and James Wood 鈥24; ocean engineering majors 听Allison Kelley 鈥24 and Kevin Moriarty 鈥24 and entrepreneurial studies major Cameron Vose 鈥24.
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Written By:
Beth Potier | 易胜博官网 Marketing | beth.potier@unh.edu | 2-1566