Students Provide Glimpse into the Future of Clean Vehicle Technology Solutions as they Reveal Cutting-Edge EcoCAR Designs
WASHINGTON D.C. – Student engineers participating in EcoCAR: The NeXt Challenge, completed a major milestone in their three-year quest to win the competition by unveiling their vehicle architectures at the Washington Auto Show. The 17 unique designs provide a glimpse into the future of green vehicle technology solutions and embrace innovations ranging from on-board hydrogen fuel cells to all electric vehicles.
EcoCAR, which is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and General Motors (GM), as well as the Government of Canada, the California Air Resources Board and other government and industry leaders, provides invaluable experience and training to the next generation of engineers developing future clean vehicle technology solutions.
"These students represent the future in automotive engineering, and the EcoCAR Challenge is providing them with the hands-on training and experience they need to prepare for advanced technology vehicle engineering," said David Rodgers, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency at the DOE. "These student designs are innovative and ingenious. Rarely do we have the opportunity to compare such a diverse range of advanced technology vehicles with so much promise."
The student teams have worked tirelessly to develop the architectural concepts that will not only meet the competition criteria, but also represent their vision for their 'EcoCAR' of the future. Students were encouraged to explore a variety of solutions including hybrid, plug-in hybrid, fuel cell, electric, and extended range electric vehicles.
Each design is unique, and will take on a life of its own over the next few years. The 17 EcoCAR designs announced were as follows:
While each of the 17 EcoCAR designs is unique, there are common attributes including:
For more information on the announcement, please visit: http://www.green-garage.org.
At the end of the competition EcoCAR vehicles will be judged on a number of criteria including efficiency, environmental impacts, performance, consumer appeal, safety, quality of workmanship, ride quality, noise and vibration. They will also present numerous aspects of their EcoCAR work such as mechanical, control, and electric engineering accomplishments to judging panels consisting of industry and government subject matter experts.
"Working with these bright young engineers as they grapple with the trade-offs between performance, efficiency, emissions and utility is very valuable for GM because it helps prepare them for real careers in the industry," said Britta Gross, manager, Hydrogen and Electrical Infrastructure Commercialization for General Motors. "This isn't a just a contest; this is about 17 extremely innovative teams of students across North America making a difference for generations to come."
"The designs of these students remind us of the depth and creativity of the human resources that we can count on as we drive toward a new generation of green vehicle technologies," said the Honourable Lisa Raitt, Canada's Minister of Natural Resources. "Competitions like EcoCAR are a wonderful showcase for the talent and ingenuity of these students, and they take us another step closer to realizing the economic and environmental potential of these technologies."
EcoCAR is a three-year competition that builds on the 19-year history of DOE advanced vehicle technology competitions by giving engineering students the chance to design and build advanced vehicles that demonstrate leading-edge automotive technologies. During the program, General Motors will provide production vehicles, vehicle components, seed money, technical mentoring and operational support. The U.S. Department of Energy and its research and development facility, Argonne National Laboratory, will provide competition management, team evaluation and technical and logistical support. Through this important partnership between government and industry, EcoCAR aims to inspire and support the next generation of scientists and engineers to unite around the common goal of sustainable mobility.