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Top collegiate inventors awarded 2020 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize

Students around the country recognized for innovative solutions to better single-use plastic, spacecraft and aircraft fuel gauges, surgery techniques, and more.
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Daniela Blanco of New York University is the $15,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Use it!” Graduate Winner for her greener chemical reactor.
Caption:
Daniela Blanco of New York University is the $15,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Use it!” Graduate Winner for her greener chemical reactor.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of Lemelson-MIT Program.
Left to Right: Marx Acosta-Rubio, Hal Jones, and Grant Christensen of Brigham Young University are the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Use it!” Undergraduate Team Winner for their biodegradable and compostable plastic bag that is safe for wildlife to eat.
Caption:
Left to Right: Marx Acosta-Rubio, Hal Jones, and Grant Christensen of Brigham Young University are the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Use it!” Undergraduate Team Winner for their biodegradable and compostable plastic bag that is safe for wildlife to eat.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of Lemelson-MIT Program.
Left to Right: Celestine Ananda, Nicholas Bartel, Bennett Bartel, Taylor Peterson, and Cassandra Bossong of Carthage College are the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Move it!” Undergraduate Team Winner for their Modal Propellant Gauging, or MPG technology, which gauges the amount of fuel left in a tank by using vibrations and frequencies.
Caption:
Left to Right: Celestine Ananda, Nicholas Bartel, Bennett Bartel, Taylor Peterson, and Cassandra Bossong of Carthage College are the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Move it!” Undergraduate Team Winner for their Modal Propellant Gauging, or MPG technology, which gauges the amount of fuel left in a tank by using vibrations and frequencies.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of Lemelson-MIT Program.
Tzu-Chieh (Zijay) Tang of MIT is the $15,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Eat it!” Graduate Winner for Syn-SCOBY, a special kind of tea mushroom that can be grown at home and used to create a filter to detect and remove pollutants in water.
Caption:
Tzu-Chieh (Zijay) Tang of MIT is the $15,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Eat it!” Graduate Winner for Syn-SCOBY, a special kind of tea mushroom that can be grown at home and used to create a filter to detect and remove pollutants in water.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of Lemelson-MIT Program.
Shriya Srinivasan of MIT is the $15,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Cure it!” Graduate Winner for her Cutaneous Mechanoneural Interface (CMI), a new type of surgical process for amputee patients that would allow a person to sense what their prosthesis feels.
Caption:
Shriya Srinivasan of MIT is the $15,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Cure it!” Graduate Winner for her Cutaneous Mechanoneural Interface (CMI), a new type of surgical process for amputee patients that would allow a person to sense what their prosthesis feels.
Credits:
Photo: Jimmy Day
Left to right: Siddharth Iyer, Jasmine Hu, Mathias Insley, Diane Lee, and Eric Lin of Johns Hopkins University are the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Cure it!” Undergraduate Team Winner for their new material that can quickly expand to many times its size, resulting in an inexpensive and simple way to permanently stop a patient from bleeding internally.
Caption:
Left to right: Siddharth Iyer, Jasmine Hu, Mathias Insley, Diane Lee, and Eric Lin of Johns Hopkins University are the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize “Cure it!” Undergraduate Team Winner for their new material that can quickly expand to many times its size, resulting in an inexpensive and simple way to permanently stop a patient from bleeding internally.
Credits:
Photo courtesy of Lemelson-MIT Program.

Following a nationwide search for the most inventive undergraduate and graduate college students, the Lemelson-MIT Program has announced the winners of the 2020 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize. The program awarded a total of $75,000 in prizes to three undergraduate teams and three individual graduate student inventors. This year’s inventions range from a compostable, biodegradable single-use plastic bag to a new fuel gauging device that accurately detects fuel levels in spacecraft and airplane tanks.

“We are thrilled by this year’s group of winners. The pandemic has not slowed the progress of these students on their inventions. They all know their work has the ability to improve the world, which is why they are still engaged in testing even with social distancing,” says Lemelson-MIT Program Faculty Director and School of Engineering Associate Dean of Innovation Michael J. Cima.

The Lemelson-MIT Student Prize is supported by The Lemelson Foundation. The prize recognizes young inventors who have dedicated themselves to solving global problems in the fields of health care, transportation and mobility, food/water and agriculture, and consumer devices and products. Recipients were selected from a diverse and highly competitive pool of applicants from colleges and universities across the United States. 

“Congratulations to this year’s prize winners, who clearly demonstrate their collective passion for solving big challenges,” notes Carol Dahl, executive director at The Lemelson Foundation. “Their creativity and accomplishments are an inspiration for all students and show us that the capacity to tackle critical problems can be found across our country.”

2020 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize Winners

The “Use it!” Lemelson-MIT Student Prize rewards technology-based inventions that involve consumer devices and products. Winners are:

Nylon is the underlying material for clothing, car parts, parachutes, fire-fighting gear, and many other products, yet the production process results in the release of significant amounts of greenhouse gas. Blanco’s invention allows for more sustainable nylon production that uses 30 percent less energy and 30 percent less raw material, and produces 30 percent less emissions, which leads to a 20 percent reduction in manufacturing costs. This versatile technology combines machine learning and chemical engineering and can be implemented to improve the production of a multitude of chemical products. 

The Neptune team invented a biodegradable and compostable plastic film that is made into single-use bags intended for shipping and packaging purposes. Their plastic bags are safe for wildlife to eat, can be used as a fertilizer for soil after decomposition, and leave behind no microplastics.

The “Move it!” Lemelson-MIT Student Prize rewards technology-based inventions that involve transportation and mobility. This year's winners are:

Fuel gauges on spacecraft and aircraft are notoriously ineffective against things like temperature change, fuel chemistry, or sloshing of fuel due to turbulence. Frequent movement of the fuel makes it difficult for the current technology to accurately read fuel levels, putting pilots and astronauts at risk of unknowingly traveling without enough fuel. The modal propellant gauging, or MPG technology, is a way of gauging the amount of fuel left in a tank by using vibrations and frequencies. MPG uses sensors and software to “listen” to the sounds coming from the tank in order to accurately gauge the remaining amount of fuel.

The “Eat it!” Lemelson-MIT Student Prize rewards technology-based inventions that involve food/water and agriculture. The winner is:

The field of engineered living materials (ELM) is helping to solve water supply problems, yet it presents challenges for widespread real-world deployment due to scalability, cost, and safety. Tang’s invention, Syn-SCOBY, is a new ELM that is a robust synthetic symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast. This invention allows for the sustainable production of engineered bacterial cellulose-based functional materials without the need for lab equipment, and can be used by anyone at home in their kitchen to safely and inexpensively detect and remove pollutants in water. Tang is a graduate student in the Department of Biological Engineering.

The “Cure it!” Lemelson-MIT Student Prize rewards technology-based inventions that involve health care. The winners are:

Amputee patients cannot feel their environment through their prosthetic devices, making it difficult for them to interact with objects around them. Srinivasan’s invention, the Cutaneous Mechanoneural Interface (CMI), is a type of surgical process that would create a new organ-like structure for amputees that would allow them to sense what their prosthesis feels, therefore leading to greater mobility and sensation so that the patient’s independence and productivity are not inhibited. Srinivasan, now a postdoc at the Koch Institute, did her graduate work within the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology and the Biomechatronics group at the MIT Media Lab.

Internal bleeding affects millions of people worldwide, and the only current solution is expensive, difficult to use, and does not universally fit every size of blood vessel. Augeo’s innovative, new material can quickly expand to many times its size by filling with blood, resulting in a low-cost, simple solution that permanently stops bleeding in the many blood vessel sizes throughout the body.

Winners were selected based on the overall inventiveness of their work, the invention’s potential for commercialization or adoption, and youth mentorship experience.

Collegiate inventors interested in applying for the 2021 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize can find more information here. The 2021 Student Prize application will open in May 2020.

MIT K-12 invention resources for parents and teachers

Parents and teachers interested in learning more about the 2020 Student Prize winners and how they can introduce a K-12 audience to invention can visit the new MIT Full STEAM Ahead website for free invention education resources and project-based learning activities based on the prize categories in the Week 6 Package: Inventing Matters! More weekly themed educational packages that center around invention can also be found in the Week 2 Package: Stepping into Invention Education.

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