![]() |
![]() |
| Home : News & Events : Headlines : 2004 : | |
| Ice-fishing net, automated polymer pellet separation system take top honors in student invention competition |
2004 Schoofs Prize for Creativity, first place Ice Net X |
2004 Tong Prototype Prize, first place Polymer Pellet Separation via Density |
A retractable net that enables ice fishermen to easily hoist large fish through relatively small holes in the ice won top honors and $10,000 in the Schoofs Prize for Creativity, an annual innovation competition held on the UW-Madison campus. Engineering mechanics and astronautics students Nick Passint, Joe Cessna and Bryan Wilson developed the Ice Net X, which they say also could be used for warm-weather fishing because of its streamlined size. The invention also took third place and $700 in the Tong Prototype Prize competition.
After separating more than 400 pounds of different polymer pellets with a tweezers during his summer internship, chemical and biological engineering student Aaron Wallander developed an automated system that uses a fluid to separate pellets by their density. Pellets lighter than the fluid float and flow into an adjacent tank, while pellets heavier than the fluid sink and remain in the initial tank. The invention and prototype won first place and $2,500 in the Tong Prototype Prize competition.
The winners were chosen from a field of 22 ideas and inventions, including a portable computer-aided drug dispensing system, a method of storing liquid hydrogen in hybrid-electric vehicles, and a radio-frequency system for finding lost disc-golf discs, exhibited and displayed during Innovation Days, held Feb. 12 and 13 on the UW-Madison College of Engineering campus. Both competitions award cash prizes to those whose ideas are judged most creative, novel, innovative and likely to succeed in the marketplace.
|
|
|
||||||
|
|
|
Other winners include:
Schoofs Prize for Creativity
Tong Prototype Prize
2004 Tong Prototype Prize, second place Flexi-Desk |
The competitions are sponsored by the UW Technology Enterprise Cooperative. The Schoofs Prize is funded by Richard J. Schoofs, who received a bachelor of science degree in chemical engineering in 1953 from UW-Madison. The Tong Prototype Prizes and grants are sponsored by the Tong Family Foundation, including COE alumnus Peter P. Tong, who received his master of science degree in electrical and computer engineering in 1965.
|
Main sections: | Accessibility | College of Engineering homepage | Site map | Search | Directories | Feedback | Help |
|
Copyright 2004 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System Date last modified: Friday, 13-Feb-2004 17:30:00 CST Date created: 13-Feb-2004 Content By: perspective@engr.wisc.edu Thank you for visiting! |