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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Awards  



1.1  Regional Competition Awards (funded by AIChE)  





1.2  National Competition Awards (funded by Chevron)  





1.3  Past National Performance Competition Winners  







2 Rules  





3 Poster  





4 Example reactions  





5 References  





6 External links  














Chem-E-Car






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The University of Florida's 2013 AIChE Regional Conference Chem-E Car

The Chem-E-Car Competition is an annual college competition for students majoring in Chemical Engineering.

According to the competition's official rules, students must design small-scale automobiles that operate by chemical means, along with a poster describing their research. During the competition, they must drive their car a fixed distance (judged on how close the car is to the finish line) down a wedge-shaped course in order to demonstrate its capabilities. The exact distance (15-30 meters) and payload is revealed to the participants one hour before the competition. The size of designed cars cannot exceed certain specifications and cars must operate using "green" methods, which do not release any pollution or waste in the form of a visible liquid or gas, such as exhaust. The dimensions of the car are to be within 20x30x40 cm.[dubiousdiscuss] This competition is hosted in the United States by the AIChE (American Institute of Chemical Engineers), and winners of the competitions receive various awards, depending on how they placed.[1]

Awards

[edit]

Regional Competition Awards (funded by AIChE)

[edit]
Poster Competition[1]
  • Ribbons for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place
  • Ribbon for Most Creative Drive System
  • Ribbon for Most Creative Vehicle Design
Performance Competition[1]
  • 1st place: $200 and Ribbon
  • 2nd place: $100 and Ribbon
  • 3rd place: Honorable mention and Ribbon
  • Ribbons for 4th and 5th place finishers
  • Ribbon for Spirit of Competition

National Competition Awards (funded by Chevron)

[edit]

[1]

Past National Performance Competition Winners

[edit]

Rules

[edit]

The competition has various rules:[1]

Poster

[edit]

Each car is required to have a poster board explaining how the car runs (power source), some of its specific features, and how it is environmentally friendly. Judges score these posters on four different things: the description of the chemical reaction and power source (20%), the creativity of the design and its unique features (20%), environment and safety features (40%), and the overall quality of the poster, along with the team's presentation (20%). Only posters judged with a score of 70% or above may move on to the performance competition. [1]

Example reactions

[edit]

Some ideas for chemical reactions have been using pressurized air (creating oxygen through a chemical reaction and allowing it to build pressure) or using electricity created by the dissolving of metals in certain acids (basic battery). One pedantic idea by Cooper Union was to use a fuel cell[2] (a cell that converts fuel to electricity via an electrochemical reaction) to power their car.

Winners in this competition are not determined by whether their car is faster or more powerful, but how accurate their chemical reaction to stop their vehicle is. This is quite difficult, especially when the distance the car has to travel is unknown until the day of the competition. So teams must find a method that is flexible enough to fit a range of distances, and reliable enough so it does not fail with real world variables (temperature, humidity, track roughness, changes in elevation, etc.). Winners in the past have had a variety of ways of dealing with this problem, such as an iodine clock reaction.[3] This reaction works by using two clear solutions (many variations) that change color after a time delay (the exact time can be found experimentally). When applied to the car, the team used a simple image sensor that could tell when the solutions changed color, at which point the cars power would shut off by cutting the circuit.[4] While the process itself is somewhat simple, accounting for the unknown variables like the payload and distance is quite difficult.

References

[edit]
  • ^ ChemE car Zapdos takes first place at nationals, Cornell Chronicle, Cornell University.
  • ^ "Chem E Car Video"
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chem-E-Car&oldid=1200936682"

    Category: 
    Science competitions
    Hidden categories: 
    All accuracy disputes
    Articles with disputed statements from October 2013
     



    This page was last edited on 30 January 2024, at 15:27 (UTC).

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