WASHINGTON (22 February 2008)
—
Queen of Angels Catholic School of Roswell, Ga.,
won the Best Essay Award at the National
Engineers Week Future City Competition National
Finals on Wednesday.
The
IEEE sponsored the essay competition, which
featured the 36 Future City regional-winning
middle school teams that advanced to the finals
at the Hyatt Regency Washington on Capitol Hill.
The
team included students Joel Anderson, Elliott
Brewer and Reed Scott, teacher-sponsor Peggy
DeGance and engineer-mentor Catherine Anderson.
IEEE-USA President Russ Lefevre presented each
team member with a plaque.
Teams competing at the Future City finals had to
write an essay as part of the overall judging.
This year's topic was "Keeping Our Future City's
Infrastructure Healthy: Using Nanotechnology to
Monitor City Structures and Systems."
Queen of Angels' city, "Makt Stad" — Swedish for
"Power City" — is set in 2215. Its water system
uses nanosensors to monitor for disease-causing
bacteria, e.g., e-coli, salmonella and giardia;
toxic contaminants like cyanide, thallium and
xylenes; harmful living organisms such as
plankton; and bioterrorism agents, namely
"botulism, smallpox, anthrax, plague, viral
hemorrhagic fevers and tularemia."
If
the intake filters get clogged and water flow
decreases by five percent, "the nanosensors will
activate a filter cleaner and e-mail a cleaning
report to the system controller." The water is
suctioned into a holding tank, where magnetic
nanobots are added to heat the contaminants
until they are eradicated.
The
students then described the role engineers
played in designing the water filtration system:
"Mechanical engineers designed the pipe system,
holding tanks, filters, and the nanobot
delivery/magnetic retrieval system. Electrical
engineers designed the power grid for the plant.
They also worked with chemical engineers to
design the chemical sensors. Robotic engineers
manufactured the nanobots that heat up the
contaminants. Computer engineers computerized
the entire system, minimizing human
intervention."
To
read the entire Queen of Angels' essay, go to
www.futurecity.org/alumni_profiles_maktstad.htm.
The
Future City Competition, conceived in IEEE-USA
offices in 1992 and staged for the first time
during Engineers Week 1993, is designed to
encourage the future generation of engineers.
Seventh and eighth grade students create their
own vision of a future city, working first on
computer and then constructing three-dimensional
scale models.
More
than 1,100 schools and 30,000 students from
across the United States competed during the
2007-08 season. Pilot programs are underway in
Egypt, Sweden and Japan. A spin-off, "Future
Cities 2020," has started in India.
Heritage Middle School of Westerville, Ohio, won
the overall competition for their future city,
"Ra." See
www.futurecity.org or
www.eweek.org
for additional information.
For
more on the early history of the program, visit
www.todaysengineer.org/2008/Feb/FCC.asp.
IEEE-USA advances the public good and promotes
the careers and public policy interests of more
than 215,000 engineers, scientists and allied
professionals who are U.S. members of the IEEE.
IEEE-USA is part of the IEEE, the world's
largest technical professional society with
370,000 members in 160 countries. See
www.ieeeusa.org.
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