Health Innovation Shines Again at Spring Capstone Design Expo

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Walter Rich
Communications Manager
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology

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Interdisciplinary team Hub Hygiene won the evening's top award

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  • Overall Winner - Team Hub Hygiene - Capstone Expo Spring 2016 Overall Winner - Team Hub Hygiene - Capstone Expo Spring 2016
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  • BME Winner - Team AVMend - Capstone Expo 2016 BME Winner - Team AVMend - Capstone Expo 2016
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  • Interdisciplinary Winner - Team Infinitis - Capstone Expo 2016 Interdisciplinary Winner - Team Infinitis - Capstone Expo 2016
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It was a big night for health and biomedical engineering (BME) at Georgia Tech’s spring Capstone Design Expo, as teams targeting medicine and wellness took home nearly half of the event awards. Biomedical engineering students received awards in the following categories: overall winner, top biomedical engineering team, and best interdisciplinary team.

 

The high honor of being Expo's top overall winner went to Hub Hygiene, a BME student heavy interdisciplinary team that aims to reduce bloodstream infection rates. The group showed off a device that cleans a needleless IV connector.

The winning Hub Hygiene team members are:

* Pranav Godbole, mechanical engineering (ME) from Peachtree City, GA

* Ruifu Shi, biomedical engineering (BME) from Beijing, China

* Bharathwaj Nandagopal, biomedical engineering (BME) from Middletown, DE

* Timothy Gassner, biomedical engineering (BME) from Atlanta, GA

* Mary Catherine Adams, materials science and engineering (MSE) from Roswell, GA

* You Keun Kim, biomedical engineering (BME) from Carson, CA

 

The top biomedical engineering team winner was AVMend. Their goal is to develop a method to treat high-flow arteriovenous malformations, by reducing the number of treatments and complications. Arteriovenous malformations are a rare medical condition characterized by a direct connection between arteries and veins. Current treatment methods work effectively in low flow malformations, but treatment options for high flow malformations are limited.

The winning AVMend team members are:

* Katie Neuberger, biomedical engineering (BME) from Plymouth, MN

* Emily Evans, biomedical engineering (BME) from Jackson, MS

* Paige Holbrook, biomedical engineering (BME) from Atlanta, GA

* Alex Warner, biomedical engineering (BME) from Atlanta, GA

 

The team winner in the interdisciplinary category was team Infinitis. Their team is designing a more appealing intrauterine device in order to decrease the number of unintended pregnancies in the United States.

The winning Infinitis team members are:

* Taylor Armstead, materials science and engineering (MSE) from Atlanta, GA

* Emily Davis, biomedical engineering (BME) from Evans, GA

* Soleil Schatteman, mechanical engineering (ME) from Lake Hopatcong, NJ

* Shirin Kale, biomedical engineering (BME) from Pineville, NC

* Emilie Kundycki, materials science and engineering (MSE) from Canton, GA

* John Papayanopoulos, mechanical engineering (ME) from West Orange, NJ

 

In recent years, health-centric projects have grabbed center stage at the Expo, which is in some ways a compass for Georgia Tech at large. The Expo began as an exhibition for mechanical engineering alone, but it now hosts hundreds of students and reflects the Institute-wide emphases on real-world applicability and human needs.

 

Each Capstone Design Expo showcases senior projects from about a dozen Georgia Tech schools (most of them in the College of Engineering). The idea is for students to create prototypes that solve problems, though projects at the Expos are as diverse as the students themselves.

 

Many teams work with big-name sponsors – The Coca-Cola Company, Ford Motor Company, The Home Depot – to tackle corporate issues like supply chains. Some groups strike out on their own, designing new inventions that sometimes become foundations for full-fledged startup companies.

 

Other universities host similar events, but Georgia Tech’s version stands out thanks to heavy alumni involvement and participation from around the Institute.

 

Team Purrfect Engineering, which designed a better way to make paper tunnels for pet-toy company Dezi & Roo, worked in the Invention Studio to create a prototype.

 

“It just looked like such an interesting project,” said team member Joseph Tenpenny. Thanks to his mechanical engineering team’s work and its Invention Studio creation, Dezi & Roo has a more efficient manufacturing process for its cat tunnels. 

 

Team Second Self, which won the industrial engineering prize, boasted a different kind of Georgia Tech connection: Its sponsor was a brewery owned by two Tech alumni. And plenty of graduates attended the Expo as either visitors or judges, giving students a chance to network and show off their skills.

 

“A Georgia Tech alum who’s now attending medical school came by our table and said [our project] is really interesting,” said Shirin Kale, a biomedical engineering senior and member of the Infinitis team. Her group, which designed an IUD that’s easier and more comfortable to insert than current models, eventually won the prize for best interdisciplinary project.

 

Twelve teams, out of 110 total, ultimately earned awards at the spring Expo. But with so many students competing, prizes aren’t always the point.

 

The biomedical engineering team All-in-Vein, which developed an automated system to check for IV infiltrations, was sponsored by Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Infiltrations happen when IV catheters slip from veins and leak fluid, and because they affect up to 50 percent of pediatric patients, they can mean big trouble.

Although graduation is just a couple weeks away for the All-in-Vein members, they plan to continue their work, said group member Kaci Crawford.

 

“We were really encouraged after getting our provisional patent,” she explained.

 

Judges finished assessing spring Expo teams by 7 p.m., and by 8:30, the evening’s awards, photographs and speeches were all over. But for All-in-Vein and plenty of other teams, the work has only just begun.

 

 

Link to all team winners at the Spring 2016 Capstone Expo

 

Media Contacts:

Walter Rich
Communications Manager
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology

 

Story by Walter Rich and Lyndsey Lewis, Photos by Candler Hobbs

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Wallace H. Coulter Dept. of Biomedical Engineering

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Capstone design expo 2016
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  • Created By: Walter Rich
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Apr 27, 2016 - 7:50am
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:21pm