Poster
Competition Winners / Abstracts - Technology
Technology 1 - 1st Place
Homeless-less
By Julio Torres Santana, Cornell University
Three years ago I was introduced to a project to design
a one person’s portable shelter that was easy to transport
and offered some type of protection against the cold weather.
After several sketches and analysis I came up with a concept
that differed from any other design ever seen before by my
instructors. The project had to be conceived under a $75 dollars
budget; therefore I was encouraged to use material like unwanted
pieces wood, traps, other materials found in dumpsters and
etc.
Not long ego I put the shelter to the test by re-creating
a new re-designed real scale model and tested it on myself.
A comparison of temperatures between the inside and the outside
of the shelter were made throughout different times one night
to test if my hypothesis was correct. My poster will show
the results of my studies, research, and interviews for homeless
individual from New York City. Also, a Syracuse Post-standard
article about the shelter will be visible in the poster, design
drawings and more. Finally, I will talk about the materials
and methods used to create this portable shelter for the homeless.
Technology 1 - 2nd Place
The Visualization of 2D Flow Regimes Through the Use of Soap
Films
By Richard Linares, University at Buffalo
The physics of fluid motion and the transition from laminar
to turbulence remains one of the unsolved problems in physics,
making the investigation of fluidic phenomenon a hot topic.
Fluids are difficult to study experimentally because of the
difficulty in observing the inherent motion of fluids. This
issue arises due to the fact that fluids are usually transparent
or of uniform color and fluids have the tendency to develop
in three dimensions meaning. Ample effort has gone into the
study of fluid flow using more conventional wind tunnel and
water tunnel experiments, but these cases are difficult to
model and implement. The elimination of one flow direction
(degree of freedom) simplifies the conditions and allows comparison
to the simplified numerical computer model. This gives us
a starting point to expand our understanding. The experimental
method that we have adopted has unique physical properties
that make running fluidic studies simple, cost efficient,
self containing and easily visualized. Soap film brilliant
flow visualization ability; coupled with their two dimensionality
make soap films a formable tool for the study of fluids. Soap
bubbles are very thin film, essentially a two dimensional
surfaces, which when flowing behave as a two dimensional fluid.
The primary goal of our experimental work is to construct
a counter-flowing shear layer experiment through the use of
soap films. Using soap films two dimensionality a temporal
developing shear layer can be studied in detail.
Technology 2 - 1st Place
Noise Reduction of MR Brain Images Via the Use of Spatial
and Frequency Filters
By Troy Johnson, College of Staten Island
The subject of image noise is quite a proverbial issue in
the field of medical imaging. It is the result of pixel fluctuation
in an image and usually occurs when light exposure on the
subject being examined is at a minimum. This unwanted behavior
appears as random speckles on a normally smooth image and
gives it a grainy appearance.
Image noise isn’t exclusive to medical imaging but
also affects digital cameras and is a grave concern to camera
manufacturers. In photographs, noise appears as specks, pale
areas of white or blotchy patches where there is normally
a uniform graduation of shade. This outcome is usually created
by electronic noise and low light conditions. Electronic noise
in digital photography occurs during the process of converting
light into digital numbers.
This project studies the effectiveness of spatial and frequency
filtering in reducing noise in five brain images at various
noise intensities. The usefullness of both filters are tested
and analysed on the images via the use of algorithms. From
the procedures it will be shown that the pixels which constitute
images can be mathematically manipulated to reduce noise thereby
refining an image’s appearance.
Technology 2 - 2nd Place
A System for Nano Fibers
By Beverly Theodore, SUNY Farmingdale
Electrospinning is a novel technique for producing fibers
with nanoscale diameters from a wide range of materials. In
this process, a strong electric field causes a viscous solution
to form a cone, from which a thin fluid jet is formed. This
fluid jet may harden by a variety of processes and become
a continuous nanoscale fiber. The fiber is collected using
a collector electrode. The nanofiber has a wide range of applications
from medicine to textiles,
A team of Science and Technology students at SUNY-Farmingdale
have utilized the principles of electrospinning and the concepts
of general engineering to design and build a system for nanoscale
production of fibers. This poster will present the details
of the “home-built” nano fabrication system. It
will present the unique aspects of the project and its wide
application potentials.
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