The MathWorks(tm) today announced it has awarded a team of engineering students from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology with The MathWorks "Crossover to Model-Based Design" Award at Challenge X, the four-year student engineering competition sponsored by General Motors Corporation (GM) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
NATICK, Mass. (BusinessWire EON) June 29, 2007 --
The MathWorkstm
today announced it has awarded a team of engineering students from
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology with The MathWorks “Crossover
to Model-Based Design” Award at Challenge X,
the four-year student engineering competition sponsored by General
Motors Corporation (GM) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
The award was given to the team that best applied Model-Based
Design using MATLAB®
and Simulink®
to reengineer a 2005 Chevrolet Equinox for better fuel-efficiency. The
Ohio State University, last year’s award
winner, achieved second place in this year’s
competition, while the University of Waterloo received third place.
“Rose-Hulman set the standard by
systematically applying Model-Based Design to the entire vehicle
development process,” said Paul Smith,
director of North American consulting services at The MathWorks. “They
mastered the use of models to verify and validate through each
incremental step in the development process, and ensured that the final
design met the vehicle requirements.”
“Our team found that Model-Based Design using
Simulink is so valuable that we have been teaching the process to all of
our team members,” said Ben Ciavola, a senior
mechanical engineering student on the Rose-Hulman team. “This
way, anyone who so much as turns a wrench on our car knows how to
approach the vehicle from a controls and modeling standpoint. Everyone
can speak the same language when diagnosing problems in our vehicle.”
Out of over 100 applicants, 17 teams were chosen to participate in the
elite competition that challenges top engineering students from the
United States and Canada to reengineer a Chevy Equinox, a crossover
sport utility vehicle. This is the third year of Challenge X, during
which students refined their advanced technology vehicles with the goal
of delivering a showroom-ready vehicle that meets consumer requirements
for performance, safety, and aesthetics. In this year’s
segment, which took place at GM’s Milford
Proving Ground in Michigan from May 30-June 7, teams were evaluated in
their ability to optimize the vehicle’s
utility, reduce energy consumption, and decrease emissions.
The MathWorks, which offers software and support for all the
participating teams, has sponsored the competition since its inception
in 2004. By providing Challenge X teams with these technologies, The
MathWorks is preparing hundreds of highly skilled engineering students
to lead the automotive industry using Model-Based Design.
The other teams participating in the 2007 challenge include: Michigan
Technological University; Mississippi State University; Pennsylvania
State University; San Diego State University; University of Akron;
University of California, Davis; Texas Tech University; University of
Michigan; University of Texas at Austin; University of Tennessee,
Knoxville; University of Tulsa; University of Wisconsin –
Madison; Virginia Tech; and West Virginia University.
Additional information about Challenge X is available online at www.challengex.org.
About The MathWorks
The MathWorks is the world’s leading
developer of technical computing and Model-Based Design software for
engineers and scientists in industry, government, and education. With an
extensive product set based on MATLAB and Simulink, The MathWorks
provides software and services to solve challenging problems and
accelerate innovation in automotive, aerospace, communications,
financial services, biotechnology, electronics, instrumentation,
process, and other industries.
The MathWorks was founded in 1984 and employs more than 1,600 people
worldwide, with headquarters in Natick, Massachusetts. For additional
information, visit www.mathworks.com.
MATLAB, Simulink, Stateflow, Handle Graphics, Real-Time Workshop,
SimBiology, SimHydraulics, SimEvents, and xPC TargetBox are registered
trademarks and The MathWorks, the L-shaped membrane logo, and Embedded
MATLAB are trademarks of The MathWorks, Inc. Other product or brand
names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective
holders.
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