The Ohio State (OSU) & Wilberforce University Team was named the winner of Year One of the EcoCAR Electric Vehicle (EV) Challenge, taking the lead in the four-year collegiate engineering competition. West Virginia University took second place and University of Alabama finished third in the judged competition, held May 21–26 in Orlando, FL.
Managed by Argonne National Laboratory and sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), General Motors and MathWorks, the EcoCAR EV Challenge is a cross-disciplinary competition among 15 North American universities designed to build an EV talent pipeline through cutting edge automotive engineering education and practical application.
Participating teams are tasked with complex, real-world technical EV challenges, including enhancing the propulsion system of a 2023 Cadillac LYRIQ to optimize energy efficiency while maintaining consumer expectations for performance and driving experience throughout the four-year competition. Diversity, equity and inclusion are at the forefront of the EcoCAR EV Challenge, which promotes STEM to inspire the next generation of an EV workforce that is representative of all communities.
“Year One of EcoCAR is all about generating big ideas and developing a strategy for the remainder of the competition,” said Acting Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Alejandro Moreno. “These students are already demonstrating the capacity and drive needed to pursue careers in the EV sector and become trailblazers in the mobility industry.”
While OSU has been in Advanced Vehicle Technology Competitions (AVTC) for more than two decades, this was the first time they chose to form a collaborative partnership with another school to compete in the program. Last fall, the team set out to establish a partnership with Wilberforce University (HBCU).
This presented unique challenges with integration between the two groups of students, but the team has now proven they can compete successfully as one cohesive team. The team excelled across all judged categories in Year One, earning top three finishes for 12 of the pre-competition deliverables, 10 of which were first place finishes. The team will take home $10,000 in prize money from industry sponsors.
In Year Two of the competition, each student team will receive a Cadillac LYRIQ, a next-generation battery electric vehicle (BEV) provided by GM. Teams will be tasked with reengineering the vehicle to add new energy efficient and customer-friendly features designed to address the decarbonization needs of the automotive industry.
“As a proud EcoCAR sponsor, we are honored to continue to provide the tools and training to help build the next generation of EV talent,” said Ken Morris, vice president, electric and autonomous vehicles at GM. “As this competition progresses, we look forward to seeing how the students incorporate their ideas from this year and put their skills to the test in reengineering their Cadillac LYRIQs. We congratulate the Ohio State and Wilberforce team on their first-year win and are excited to see what the remainder of the competition has in store.”
“The team’s complex embedded system designs were impressive,” said Lauren Tabolinsky, global academic student programs manager at MathWorks. “We look forward to seeing the teams continue to use MATLAB and Simulink to build and simulate their EV designs throughout the duration of the multi-year competition.”
For more information about the EcoCAR EV Challenge, visit avtcseries.org.
Source: EcoCAR EV Challenge
Abby Andrews