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6th Feb 09
National Instruments is platinum
sponsor for EcoCAR design challenge
National Instruments is contributing as a platinum sponsor
for EcoCAR. EcoCAR is a new collegiate vehicle engineering
competition for which students will reengineer a 2009 Saturn
VUE with advanced technology to reduce environmental impact
while retaining consumer appeal. As a platinum sponsor,
NI is donating more than $300,000 worth of engineering hardware
and software to student teams in 2009, including NI LabVIEW
graphical system design software, CompactRIO in-vehicle
embedded control systems and PXI modular simulation systems.
Teams will use these tools to design, prototype and deploy
their vehicles and tackle the unique algorithm engineering
challenges associated with developing advanced hybrid vehicles.
The EcoCAR challenge continues the 20-year history of advanced
vehicle technology competitions established by the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE). The three-year competition gives
US engineering students the opportunity to design and build
advanced vehicles with next-generation automotive technologies
while gaining valuable hands-on learning experience with
the latest automotive engineering tools and techniques.
"In this first year of competition, NI LabVIEW software
and PXI hardware will prove especially useful while teams
focus on the modeling, simulation and testing of their control
strategies," said Kristen De La Rosa, director of advanced
vehicle technology competitions at Argonne National Laboratory,
the organizer of the competition. "Additionally, NI
equipment will help teams through the entire multiyear process
because students can continue using this single development
environment and NI hardware as a platform for bringing their
vehicle designs to life."
The competition is patterned after real-world automotive
engineering practices that emphasize a model-based design
approach. Students will focus on the vehicle design and
modeling in the first year, during which selected teams
will use NI PXI hardware and the LabVIEW Real-Time Module
to develop hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) simulations of their
vehicles. These HIL simulations will serve as virtual vehicles
on which teams can test and validate advanced in-vehicle
hybrid system controllers before the actual vehicle designs
are assembled. Students will use NI CompactRIO embedded
controllers with LabVIEW as well as systems from other sponsors
to implement control models that will optimize the interaction
between electric motors, combustion engines and energy storage
systems.
When teams receive actual vehicles in the second year of
competition, they will be able to integrate their controllers
into those vehicles with minimal effort. At the end of years
two and three, students will use their reengineered Saturn
VUE vehicles to compete in a weeklong series of competitions
for proving-grounds testing and technical evaluation in
a number of key categories including fuel economy, greenhouse
gas emissions, dynamic performance, consumer acceptability
and engineering practices.
To know further on NI's academic support visit www.ni.com/academic
and for additional information about the EcoCAR challenge
is available at www.ecocarchallenge.org.
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