草榴社区 senior design project goes to market
Engineering capstone senior design projects are a fun and technical way for students to collaborate and use the skills they have learned to solve a real-world problem. Often the product goes no further than the classroom. Abigail Leigh and a team of fellow 草榴社区 mechanical engineering students 鈥 Josiah Alverts and Conner Owen 鈥攗sed their senior project to work with a local aviation and mountaineering safety equipment designer, Ray Huot, to design a better and more mobile inflatable emergency backboard.
鈥淲e believed that this project was more likely to be completed or have significant progress versus the other project we are looking at which required a lot of skills that we didn鈥檛 necessarily have 鈥 particularly more in like [the] computer and electronic sort of engineering spectrum,鈥 said Leigh.
And, it didn鈥檛 hurt that all the members on the senior design team were avid outdoors people, often venturing into the backcountry, away from cell phone signals and immediate assistance.
The team was working with a material called 鈥淒rop Stitch,鈥 a fabric used for inflatable products like stand-up paddle boards. It can be welded together to create a highly rigid inflated product. The team鈥檚 goal was to develop a rigid inflatable board suitable for stabilizing an injured patient in the backcountry. With a concept and inflation device prototyped for their senior design presentation, they, with Huot, realized the product could see a commercial market.
They took their project beyond the classroom and participated in the 草榴社区 National Science Foundation I-Corps site program. This program helps to accelerate academic research projects that are ready to move toward commercialization by providing mentorship and funding the customer discovery process.
Customer discovery is a keystone element of developing a startup business. Innovators research and speak to potential customers about their needs, and rather than finding a customer or market for a product they have developed, they can use the needs and ideas learned from interviews to tweak their product, or pivot completely in a different direction. The process can be conducted at any stage during the innovation process.
Customer discovery led the team to industries that currently use emergency backboards for transporting patients. This turned out to be an important step.
University Fire Department personnel noted that the current backboards for transporting patients are extremely rigid. Patients sometimes are strapped on the backboards for a long time before getting to a hospital, and the boards can be very uncomfortable.
鈥淥ur goal in creating a perfectly rigid board is actually not essential,鈥 said Leigh. 鈥淭he end goal of a spinal board isn鈥檛 to keep your whole body rigid, it鈥檚 just to stabilize your spine.鈥
The firefighters introduced the team to the board they currently use called a vacuum mattress. The system is more comfortable, 鈥渂ut it is humongous so they can鈥檛 actually bring it with them in a lot of circumstances, because [the firefighter] said it takes up like a three-by-three foot cube. It鈥檚 huge,鈥 added Leigh.
This vacuum mattress is like a beanbag that is inflated around the patient, giving more support through a whole-body-conforming system that is comfortable for hours.
The team found that they needed to go back to their prototype. Instead of creating a perfectly rigid board, they needed to take the body conforming vacuum mattress idea and make it more mobile and therefore useful to a wider variety of customers.
鈥淚 was speaking with someone and they said the most important thing in engineering is that when you鈥檙e creating a product that it鈥檚 able to do more than one thing,鈥 said Leigh. 鈥淪o, we started off with this product, just hoping to have a regular spinal board and for it to be compact. But I am coming to realize that we can even adapt the board in a way, where it鈥檚 not just a normal spinal board, it鈥檚 kind of more like the vacuum mattress that firefighters and police are leaning towards.鈥
The team has taken a break from designing the system and has been focusing their time on interviewing people about the emergency equipment they already have, and if they don鈥檛 use it, trying to find out why not. The reasons given so far have been limited space and weight, so the team is now refocusing their efforts on understanding the needs of the market.
The team is thankful for mentorship throughout the entire process. They received support and advice from 草榴社区 mechanical engineering faculty Rorik Peterson during the senior design project phase. Once a month they check in with Huot to give updates on their progress and the issues they have encountered.
Huot has a vested interest in the final product. He researched and purchased the fabric for the team and has been very supportive.
鈥淚t was really incredible to have his help throughout the whole project and even past the project when we were working with I-Corps, it was very nice,鈥 added Leigh.
Leigh and her team were supported through the 草榴社区 Center ICE Seed Fund for their senior design project and they continued to work on this in their I-Corps discovery process. They connected with a range of potential stakeholders and users of their technology to discover their needs and the market opportunity and segments for their backboard.
鈥淕aining information on the pains of the end user and testing their value proposition, Abigail and her team gained beneficial feedback to help them and entrepreneur Huot on ideating upon their design to provide the best product for the market need,鈥 said Center ICE鈥檚 Peter Webley.
Leigh has graduated from 草榴社区 now, and while still part of the inflatable backboard team, she is putting her education and people skills to work as an engineer for innovative design and engineering firm Disher in Zeeland, Michigan.
One of Leigh鈥檚 biggest takeaways from her engineering education and I-Corps process has been communication. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 really matter how smart you are or what you make if you aren鈥檛 able to accurately express these ideas to other people.鈥
Learn more about the Center ICE NSF I-Corps program at uaf.edu/centerice/customer-discovery/.