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The "Screaming Eagle" Chem-E-Car powered its way past
all competitors to deliver a national championship to TTU, courtesy
of a team of our Chemical Engineering students.
To win the American Institute of Chemical Engineers'
National Chem-E-Car title, our students defeated 30 teams at the
Cincinnati site, including second-place Oklahoma State University,
Vanderbilt University, Virginia Tech, Berkeley, Ohio State and Penn
State. The victory improved on TTU's second place finish in the
previous competition.
"We knew it was going to be a tough competition,"
says team member Regan Chandler. "This has been great. We learned
so much about alternative fuels from this experience."
At a time when the United States is seeking alternative
fuels, the Chem-E-Car competition has become an important venue
for college students to use chemical reactions to power vehicles.
The competition challenged students to test their classroom knowledge
by building shoebox-sized cars powered by controlled chemical reactions.
The small cars had to transport a payload a specified distance –
and students didn’t learn until 60 minutes before the competition
what that payload and distance were.
The "Screaming Eagle," powered by a
zinc air fuel cell, best met the challenge to transport 300 milliliters
of water 79 feet. The car came closer than any of its challengers,
missing the mark by only one inch. It carried the water 78 feet,
11 inches, in two minutes.
"We were stunned," says team member
Braxton Sluder. "We just stood there staring at the car for
a minute, and then we jumped into the air."
Last year's team finished second after qualifying
for the national championship for the first time. Those students
predicted that this year's competition would be a time to shine.
The TTU team received $2,000 in prize money.
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