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6th Place in the 2007 National Chemical Reaction Powered Car Competition

After qualifying in regional competition in the spring our student team placed sixth in the 2007 national AIChE Chem-E-Car competition in Salt Lake City, Utah, this November. 

When dismantled, the cars must fit in a shoe box.  Students must make the cars, and are free to use any power system that they choose.  Our team choose to decompose hydrogen peroxide with potassium iodide, and proudly painted the cylinder Cowboy Orange.  Pressure from the reaction pushes a piston, which drives the car.  The winning car stops closest to a finish line.  Students who can achieve the most precise control of a chemical reaction, not speed, will have the winning car.   The distance and payload weight varies from event to event, and one hour prior to the national competition, the judges drew 67-feet and 350-ml of water from the hat.  Our car stopped 30-inches from the finish line.

Sabre Arrowood, a junior on the 2007 OSU team provides commentary to introduce the car while teammates and seniors Jeremy Tillman and Samira Khashayari look on.

The team from Cooper union placed first, only 4-inches from the line, with a baking soda and vinegar powered car.  The car from Carnegie Mellon took second with copper-zinc battery power.  Third went to the University of Oklahoma who also used KI and H2O2 power. LSU, baking soda and vinegar, placed fourth.  And Bucknell, with a magnesium fuse to stop an electric current, placed 5th.  OSU placed 6th.  There were 33 teams at the national competition, about three from each regional competition who qualified from about 15 in each region.

In 2005, the OSU team placed 2nd in the national competition, and we have been in the national top 10 almost every one of the past 8 competitions.

Because we are leading national trends in safety incorporation in the car, and repeatedly show in the national competition, OSU students were also invited to give a presentation on how to incorporate the Chem-E-Car contest within the undergraduate curriculum.  Left to Right, Ogadimna Offer, Grant McCool, Megan Benyshek, Aleisha McCabe, Archie Meisman, Derek Sumner, and OSU Chem-e-Car Advisor Sundar Madihally pose prior to the presentation.

We are very pleased with the support of Chevron Phillips Chemical Company for the OSU Chem-E-Car activities.  Employees from “CP Chem” judge the posters and encourage students at our local competition, and review the preliminary design and safety analysis that students submit prior to building the cars.  Funding from CP Chem buys parts for the cars, and provides funds for students to participate in the regional and national competitions.  CP Chem is essential to the success of our program.

 
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