
Team Multifun from Delft University of Technology, Winners of Airbus Fly Your Ideas 2015. From left: Dhamotharan Veerasamy, Ajith Moses, Sathiskumar Anusuya Ponnusami, Dineshkumar Harursampath, Academic mentor Indian Institute of Science, Shashank Agrawal, Mohit Gupta.
Toulouse, France – Team Multifun from Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands, has been crowned champion of the fourth edition of Airbus Fly Your Ideas global student competition, organized in partnership with UNESCO to encourage the next generation of innovators and uncover future solutions for the future of flight.
As well as receiving the coveted trophy, the winning team of students Sathiskumar Anusuya Ponnusami (team leader), Shashank Agrawal, Dhamotharan Veerasamy, Mohit Gupta, and Ajith Moses received the top prize of 30,000 euros.
The final round of the competition was held in Hamburg, Germany, where the five shortlisted teams presented their innovative concepts to a prestigious jury of Airbus and industry experts led by Charles Champion, Airbus executive vice president Engineering.
The five dynamic members of the all-Indian team have been able to work 24 hours a day by interacting across physical boundaries from four different locations around the world, as they are based in India (Indian Institute of Science Bangalore), the UK (City University London), the USA (Georgia Tech), and the Netherlands (Delft University of Technology). Keeping very efficient interactions between them, the Multifun team members met physically for the very first time at the final round of the event, where they managed to present the most disruptive idea for the future of aviation.
Team Multifun’s winning idea is all about good vibrations. The team’s idea entails aircraft wings dressed in a composite skin that harvests energy from natural vibrations or flex in the wings. Piezoelectric fibers gather electrical charges from even the smallest movements during flight, storing the energy generated in battery panels integrated in the fuselage and using it to power auxiliary in-flight systems, such as lighting and entertainment systems. This reduces the energy footprint of aircraft during flight and could even replace the entire power source for ground operations.
Undertaking a very different approach from the winners, the runners-up were team Retrolley from University of São Paulo, Brazil. They gathered information from diverse aviation industry representatives came up with a very practical and simple to implement idea for a system that tackles waste reduction in-flight and cuts down the time taken to collect and sort rubbish post-flight, speeding up airline operations particularly for short-haul carriers. They share a prize of 15,000 euros.
Source: Airbus
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