EVANSTON, US: Two Northwestern Engineering graduate students are drawing circles around the competition. Daniel Hickox-Young and Luke Prestowitz developed a novel “smart ink” pen, which propelled them to the KAUST DIY Electronics Innovation Challenge, an international contest to encourage creative and inexpensive electronics.
Called the “PolySketch Pen,” the patent-pending tool culminated from a course project in MSE 337: Introduction to conducting polymers, developed by Jiaxing Huang. Huang, an associate professor of materials science and engineering, designed the class to include self-directed experiments that challenge students to use ordinary items to create their own innovative projects.
“Students in MSE 337 are encouraged to come up with a new idea and demonstrate the proof-of-concept,” Huang said. “They can do whatever they want as long as they can justify the connection to class.”
Hickox-Young and Prestowitz’s pen contains a conductive polymer ink made from dispersed polyaniline nanofibers in water. The students also worked out the right additives to help the ink dry quickly and make writing smooth on paper. Huang enjoyed writing with it so much that he used it to grade the class’s exams.
Next, Hickox-Young and Prestowitz began exploring applications for their new tool. The pen’s conductive ink can be used to create chemical and mechanical sensors. They sketched a circuit with the pen and then connected it to a LED light. The light shined brighter in the presence of an acid and turned off in the presence of a base. They also used the PolySketch pen to colour the fingertips in a pair of gloves, making them touchscreen compatible.
“Because it’s easy and safe to use, families and teachers can teach their kids and students basic scientific principles,” Prestowitz said.
The results were reported in a recent paper published in the Journal of Chemical Education.
The PolySketch pen impressed Huang so much that he encouraged Hickox-Young and Prestowitz to enter the DIY Electronics Innovation Challenge, hosted by the National Science Foundation’s Research Conference on Interactive Electronics in collaboration with the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) in Saudi Arabia.
“The objective of the DIY Electronics Innovation Challenge is to encourage citizen science worldwide by making new electronic applications using daily materials,” said Muhammad Mustafa Hussain, associate professor of electrical engineering at KAUST and the conference director who proposed the contest. “The judging panel was impressed by Northwestern’s submission.”
Not only did the judges select Hickox-Young and Prestowitz as one of just two winning projects, they awarded both students a trip to attend the three-day conference at KAUST.
“Luke Prestowitz and Daniel Hickox-Young’s video stood out among many others,” said Boon Ooi, professor of electrical engineering at KAUST and the conference’s program chair. “Their project ideas are highly creative. They also did a great job in presenting their project. Their video is fun to watch and very educative and informative.”
During the conference, Hickox-Young and Prestowitz presented their PolySketch video to conference attendees as well as elementary school students and their teachers. The presentation was met with a positive response from audience members of all ages.
“The highlight of my trip was a visit to the KAUST School for Next-generation in Science and Technology, where Daniel and Luke presented their project to a room full of elementary school students,” said Mark Lundstrom, the Don and Carol Scifres distinguished professor at Purdue University. “Hands-on electronics projects are critical for conveying the excitement of electronics science and technology to young people. As Daniel and Luke demonstrated their ‘smart ink pen,’ they made electronics ‘cool’ to these kids. You could see it on their faces and from their questions afterwards.”
© Chemical Today News
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