Project Kirigami ENV Wins 2019 Senior Design Competition Medium.com Archive / May 13, 2019 Share: Author: Evan Lerner Project Kirigami ENV Wins 2019 Senior Design Competition The semi-autonomous system for reducing buildings’ energy costs is inspired by a Japanese art form. Kirigami ENV, a team from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, took home the top prize in this year’s Senior Design Competition. By Lauren Salig During their senior year, Penn Engineering students from all six of the school’s departments dedicate themselves to developing the pinnacle of their engineering education: their senior design project. Through two mandatory classes taken in the fall and spring of their senior year, student teams work to pinpoint a real-world problem and spend the year trying to solve it. The process of identifying an issue, brainstorming solutions and engineering new technology requires students to consult with faculty advisors and other experts in the field to refine their project. In the spring, each department holds their own competition to recognize the students’ achievements and to determine which teams from their department will move forward to the school-wide finals. On Friday, May 3, the final contenders from each department gathered in Wu and Chen Auditorium in Levine Hall to pitch their projects to a panel of alumni judges who evaluated their engineering designs and their ability to communicate their projects’ capacity to make an impact. Below are the top-placing teams as well as a list of all teams that participated in the final senior design competition. 1st PlaceProject Kirigami ENV (MSE)Grey DeSimone, Emily SpencerAdvised by Shu Yang, Professor, MSEKirigami ENV is a specially engineered building envelope, which is a material applied to a building’s exterior to bolster insulation. It’s inspired by the Japanese art form kirigami, which is based on skillfully folding and cutting paper. The Kirigami Envelope expands and contracts semi-autonomously to aid with insulation, light management and water collection, promising significant reductions in the energy costs of buildings equipped with the technology. 2nd PlaceProject SharpShooter (MEAM)Bennet Caraher, Paul Flores, Karina Gunadi, Miltos Kitsios, Matt Oslin, Jake WeldeAdvised by Bruce Kothmann, Senior Lecturer, MEAMSharpShooter is a compact, portable camera accessory that simplifies the demanding process of taking long-exposure photographs, which typically require the use of bulky equipment like a tripod. While tripods can take a few minutes to set up, eating up valuable shooting time, SharpShooter reaches similar levels of camera stability almost instantaneously. 3rd PlaceProject Bubble Stix (MSE)Narelli de Paiva Narciso, Christina Nordrum, Olivia RuizAdvised by Eric Detsi, Stephenson Term Assistant Professor, MSEBubble Stix is a system designed to safely produce hydrogen that could be used to fuel zero-emission, hydrogen-powered vehicles. Bubble Stix’s design circumvents the usual difficulties of hydrogen fuel — namely, that hydrogen is often dangerous to transport — by using water and nanoporous aluminum to produce hydrogen in an airtight environment that maintains hydrogen pressure and creates more sustainable byproducts than current hydrogen production methods. The other Senior Design Competition finalists were: Bioengineering (BE) BreatheSmartCaroline Atkinson, Sarah Cai, Rebecca Kellner, Harrison TrochéAdvised by Michael Rizk, Senior Lecturer, BE RIPTToren Arginteanu, Justin Mills, Anna Mujica, Kayla PrezelskiAdvised by Jose Pascual and Shariq Raza, Perelman School of Medicine ProscopyAbigail Anmuth, John Forde, Sarah Raizen, Rohit ShindeAdvised by Michael Rizk, Senior Lecturer, BE Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (CBE) EthylendKerri Heuser, Vinson Liao, Neha NarainAdvised by Daeyeon Lee, Professor, CBE Computer and Information Science (CIS) Scene++Henry Zhu, Liam Dugan, Ziad Ben Hadj-Aloune, Zhengyi LouAdvised by Stephen Lane, Professor of Practice, CIS Peer-3-PeerSimran Arora, Jenna Barton, Ben Judd, Ramya Rao, David WangAdvised by Vincent Liu, Assistant Professor, CIS Fair Machine LearningAdel Boyarsky, Willam Brown, Aaron Hallac, Arnab SarkerAdvised by Micheal Kearns, National Center Professor of Management & Technology, CIS Electrical and Systems Engineering (ESE) HeartwareJonathan Chen, Jason Schwartz, Jared Winograd, Matthew WolfmanAdvised by James Weimer, Research Assistant Professor, CIS IV SightGillian Able, Madeline Paliganoff, Emma Dong, Eric Dong, Bridget TempleAdvised by James Won, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia FundrightTawfik Raouf, Cristina Amusategui, Braden Fineberg, Alec GelfenbeinAdvised by Pete Fader, The Wharton School. Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) Sole3DSona Dadhania, William Drobnick, Kiera Thompson TowellAdvised by Jordan Raney, Assistant Professor, MEAM Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics (MEAM) TerraNova (Honorable Mention)Jonah Arnheim, Claire Brundage, Allie Grey, Dylan Hawkes, Gregory Robinov, Raphael Van HoffelenAdvised by Mark Yim, Professor, MEAM Aerate (Honorable Mention)Yann Pfitzer, Connor Sendel, Sam Weintraub, Ashwin Kishen, Spencer Collins, Jake FineAdvised by Paulo Arratia, Professor, MEAM Read More For Philly Tech Week, a Showcase for Cutting-edge Robots Shu Yang Honored as a Leader in STEM with Drexel’s ELATES Fellow Program