Quality Magazine
  Home
  Subscribe
  Subscribe to eNewsletter
  Subscription Customer Service
  Online
  Industry Headlines
  eXtras
  Blogs
  Quality Product Spotlights
  White Papers on the Web
  Tech ManufactureXPO
  Quality Downloads
  Webinars
  Quality Showcases
  e-Inserts Plus
  Online Store
  More Product Info
  Archive
  Q-Tube
  Q-Cast Podcasts
  Quality Showrooms
  Brain Teasers
  Current Issue
  Coming Events
  Features
  Departments
  Columns
  Products
  Quality Quick Clicks
  Special Sections
  NDT
  Vision & Sensors
  Aerospace
  How To Guide
  China Editions
  Quality Guides
  Quality Buyers Guide
  Software Selector
  Registrars Guide
  Services Guide
  Quality Services
  Job Marketplace
  Industry Links
  Classifieds
  Career Center
  Events
  Quality Expo 2012
  IMTS 2012
  Meetings and Shows
  Industry Webinars
  Quality Awards
  2012 Quality Plant of the Year Nomination Form
  2012 Quality Professional of the Year Nomination Form
  Quality Leadership 100
  Quality Info
  Media Planning Guide
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
Advanced Engineering Tools Guide Student Teams to Develop ‘Green’ Cars of the Future

May 8, 2009

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



DETROIT--EcoCAR: The NeXt Challenge announced that three of the competition’s Platinum Sponsors, dSPACE, National Instruments and The MathWorks, are providing more than $2,300,000 of hardware and software tools to help student teams design the green cars of the future. EcoCAR teams learn real-world automotive engineering practices through the use of Model-Based Design and graphical system design technologies that include hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) and software-in-the-loop (SIL), which help to bring the students’ vehicle visions from concept to the road. Students will unveil their final designs at the competition finals in Toronto June 12, 2009.

Model-Based Design is a process that provides professional engineers with real-time, cost-effective simulation. In the competition, it enables the student engineering teams to test virtual versions of their vehicles before the actual designs are assembled. The technology serves as a crucial first step in the vehicular development by allowing students to calculate real-world conditions using advanced models, basically creating a virtual car. The EcoCAR students are working in teams to iterate on “what if” scenarios to validate their assumptions in a simulated environment to test hybrid controls strategies using SIL technology from The MathWorks and National Instruments. With their designs fully tested, they are trying out their work in HIL systems supplied by National Instruments and dSPACE.

dSPACE, a Michigan-based manufacturer of mechatronic control systems, is contributing a complete product line of tools for embedded software development and testing with a cumulative value of more than $1 million. These tools include: MicroAutoBox, Rapid Control Prototyping (RCP) systems, HIL simulators, measurement and calibration hardware and software, autocode generating software and other tools.

Throughout the design phase, EcoCAR students are using the dSPACE Simulator, which enables them to cover every conceivable test scenario ranging from testing single engine control units to integration testing of the whole vehicle. The EcoCAR teams using dSPACE’s HIL technology include Howard University, Mississippi State University, North Carolina State University, The Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, University of Victoria, University of Waterloo and West Virginia University.

National Instruments is supporting teams by donating more than $300,000 worth of engineering hardware and software to the EcoCAR competition in 2009. This donation of modular, flexible, cost-effective equipment, that includes NI LabVIEW graphical system design software, CompactRIO in-vehicle embedded control systems and PXI modular simulation systems provides an entire HIL solution for several teams. The student teams are using these tools to design, prototype and deploy their vehicles and tackle the unique algorithm engineering challenges associated with developing advanced hybrid vehicles.

EcoCAR teams using HIL technology from National Instruments include Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Georgia Tech, Michigan Tech University, Missouri University of Science and Technology, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Texas Tech, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, University of Wisconsin and Virginia Tech. Two of these teams, Embry-Riddle and Virginia Tech also are using the National Instruments SIL solution for their projects.

The MathWorks, a Natick, MA-based company committed to advancing education in engineering, science, and math, is donating software for Model-Based Design, including its core software MATLAB and Simulink. The company is also delivering intensive training to all student teams and faculty advisors and providing experienced automotive industry consultants as mentors who work closely with students throughout the three-year competition. To date, The MathWorks has provided more than $1 million in product and in-kind donations to the competition. All seventeen EcoCAR teams are using The MathWorks tools for Model-Based Design.



|PrintEmail

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.


























Most Emailed Articles

  1. Management: A Closer Look: Understanding Risk Management for Medical Device Manufacturers
  2. Auto Industry Goes on U.S. Hiring Binge
  3. Jim’s Gems: Don’t Focus on What Seems Unfair
  4. GD&T Workshop: A Top Down View
  5. Understanding ISO 13485
  6. Other Dimensions: Does New Stuff Have to be Calibrated?
  7. Software & Analysis: FMEAs for the Medical Industry: Which FMEA Type Should I Use?
  8. Face of Quality: Focus on the Vital Few
  9. Software & Analysis: FMEAs for the Medical Industry: Which FMEA Type Should I Use?
  10. Quality 101: Surface Finish Measurement Basics
Top Searches
  1. Quality 101
  2. variation management
  3. Quality Management Systems
  4. quality inspector
  5. root cause
  6. quality performance indicators
  7. quality assurance
  8. LEAN Quality Management Systems
  9. surface finish
  10. employee involvment
 
Most Popular Articles
  1. Measurement: The Democratization of Measurement 01/27/2012
  2. Test & Inspection: Sensing the Thread 01/30/2012
  3. U.S. Manufacturing Making a Comeback 02/01/2012
  4. Management: A Closer Look: Understanding Risk Management for Medical Device Manufacturers 01/03/2012
  5. Understanding ISO 13485 01/02/2008
  6. Quality 101: An Introduction to Gage R&R 12/01/2005
  7. Other Dimensions: Does New Stuff Have to be Calibrated? 01/31/2012
  8. Jim's Gems: Think Ahead 01/30/2012
  9. Quality Management 2.0: Deming's 7 Deadly Diseases of Management 01/20/2012
  10. Quality Measurement: Effects of Screw-Thread Geometry 10/01/2005
© 2010 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy