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CBEE wins AIChE Mid-Atlantic Regional Competitions

Teams earn spots in the National Competition

We are excited to share the astounding success of multiple CBEE teams who competed in intellectual competitions at the AIChE 2024 Mid-Atlantic Student Conference April 6-7, 2024 at UMBC. 

UMBC teams, consisting of chemical engineering majors,placed first place in both the ChemE Jeopardy and Chem-E-Car competitions. Thus, both teams earned a spot in the national competition at the 2024 AIChE Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA in October. 

ChemE Jeopardy 

ChemE Jeopardy is a trivia competition that utilizes questions from Chemical Engineering undergraduate coursework. Teams compete at regional competitions to earn a spot in the national competition held during AIChE’s annual meeting.

Two UMBC teams competed at the AIChE 2024 Mid-Atlantic Student Conference. UMBC Team #1 won first place in the competition. With the first place in by UMBC Team #1, UMBC will compete in the National ChemE Jeopardy competition for the fifth year in a row. 

UMBC Team #2 made it to the semifinals but narrowly missed a spot in the final by 100 points. We are so proud of Team #2 strong showing during their first competition together. 

UMBC Team # 1: 

  • Ethan Banks, chemical engineering, traditional track ‘24
  • Colin Jones (Jeopardy Chair), chemical engineering, biotechnology and bioengineering track ‘25
  • Paul Loberg - chemical engineering, biotechnology and bioengineering track ‘24
  • Pavan Umashankar chemical engineering, biotechnology and bioengineering track ‘25

UMBC Team #2:

  • Jacob Craft, chemical engineering, environmental engineering track
  • Joshua Lewis, chemical engineering, biotechnology and bioengineering track
  • Dylan Hildt, chemical engineering, traditional track
  • Jonathan Wu, chemical engineering, traditional track

Chem-E-Car

Chem-E-Car is a design and construction competition where teams develop small-scale automobiles that operate by chemical means, along with a poster describing their research. Each aspect of the competition is judged and awarded separately. During the poster presentations the team members explain the chemical engineering principles behind the design and the construction of the team’s car with the use of visualization on the poster. During the competition, teams must drive their car a fixed distance. One hour prior to the beginning of the first run, teams are informed of the specific distance and the payload for the competition. Each team is given two runs for their car. The teams are judged based on the closest to the finish line. 

UMBC’s Chem-E-Car team, VoltsMaxxing, won the Chem-E-Car competition and placed 3rd in the poster presentations. During the Chem-E-Car competition the team’s car stopped 1.3 m away from the target distance of 24.8 m. This is UMBC’s first Chem-E-Car win and only the second year UMBC competed in Chem-E-Car. 

VoltsMaxxing team members: 

  • Afrah Ahmed, chemical engineering
  • Jacob Craft, chemical engineering, environmental engineering track
  • Michael Dinan, environmental engineering 
  • Dylan Hildt, chemical engineering, traditional track
  • Danny Miranda, chemical engineering, traditional track 
  • David Ni, chemical engineering, traditional track
  • Jemma Przybocki, chemical engineering, biotechnology and bioengineering track
  • Ben Welling (Chem-E-car Captain), chemical engineering, environmental engineering track 
  • Jonathan Wu chemical engineering, traditional track

In addition to the amazing achievements of our students, we must also acknowledge the efforts of Dr. Neha Raikar, who worked closely with the teams in preparation for the competitions. 

Posted: May 30, 2024, 3:02 PM