WATERLOO, ON, Dec. 10, 2013 /CNW/ - Harsh winter conditions may be easier for Canadians to manage with new products invented by two University of Waterloo graduates.
"Frost is a major problem for individuals and businesses daily. Not only is it inconvenient but it has an impact on safety and can even hinder economic activity," said Abhinay Kondamreddy, a nanotechnology engineering graduate who developed Neverfrost along with three classmates.
Neverfrost is an environmentally-friendly technology that prevents frost, fog, and ice formation. The innovation is the foundation for a new startup, also called Neverfrost.
By spraying Neverfrost on a windshield at night, drivers can avoid scraping and defrosting it on cold winter mornings, and clear the windshield simply by running the wipers. The Neverfrost technology prevents snow from freezing to the glass as well as fog and frost. Neverfrost expects to begin taking pre-orders for the spray with a Kickstarter campaign in March.Future plans for Neverfrost include incorporating it directly into washer fluids.
Frost and ice create challenges for aircrafts, air conditioning, commercial refrigerators, power lines, and agriculture - creating future opportunities for the Neverfrost technology.
Kondamreddy is one of two entrepreneurs who continue to further their technologies and startups thanks to a $60,000 Scientists and Engineers in Business fellowship. The fellowship is a University of Waterloo program supported by the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario for promising entrepreneurs who want to commercialize their innovations and start high-tech businesses.
For contractors who drop salt on parking lots and sidewalks, as well as the municipalities or owners who pay for it, there's never been a way to measure how much salt is actually dispensed. Smart Scale, an automated salt logging and tracking system designed specifically for the winter maintenance industry is changing that.
Developed by Raqib Omer, a Waterloo Engineering graduate, Smart Scale uses exclusive hardware wirelessly paired with GPS-enabled smart phones to track the location of a maintenance vehicle and amount of salt dispensed, and logs the information on a cloud-based system in real time. Since the cost of salt is based on size of load, property owners can be assured they're getting what they paid for, as well as reducing risks that exist in the industry.
"With growing public concern on the environmental effects of salt, rising salt prices, and increasing fear of litigation due to slips and falls, as well as driving conditions, reliable and accurate information on salt application is becoming a necessity for maintenance contractors," said Omer.
More than 20 winter maintenance contractors in Canada and the U.S., including Urban Meadows Property Maintenance Group in Ayr, Ontario, currently use Smart Scale.
Urban Meadows owner, William Jordan, met Omer in the early testing phase of Smart Scale and the startup phase of Omer's company, Viaesys. As the first contractor to test Smart Scale, he quickly learned there were times his company was using too much salt.
"The accuracy rate wasn't there at all," said Jordan. "We're now able to accurately monitor salt usage, prevent excessive material use, keep bullet-proof records of our work and job-cost a lot better. The real time tracking of salt has helped us use up to 30 per cent less salt."
Smart Scale is now installed on all four of his company's trucks which service 75 properties in Cambridge and Ayr, including parking lots for grocery stores and post offices.
Jordan, who is also chair of the snow and ice committee management sector for the horticultural trade association, Landscape Ontario, says he quickly jumped on board with Omer's research and would like to see Smart Scale change the way salt is applied across Ontario. With no industry standards for salt application currently in place, Smart Scale could make this possible.
Neverfrost is part of the University of Waterloo's VeloCity startup incubator program and recently won two $1,000 grants at a VeloCity Fund Finals competition held in July. Neverfrost is set to one of the first companies to operate out of the new VeloCity Foundry - a workspace that will provide hardware-based startups with VeloCity programming, plus free access to machinery, tools, and prototyping equipment; and testing, wet lab and assembly space.
Nanotechnology Engineering is a multi-disciplinary engineering field, which draws from and benefits areas such as materials science and engineering, chemistry, physics, biology, and medicine. Waterloo's Nanotechnology Engineering programs are offered collaboratively through the Department of Chemical Engineering and the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the Faculty of Engineering, and the Chemistry Department in the Faculty of Science.
About the University of Waterloo
In just half a century, the University of Waterloo, located at the heart of Canada's technology hub, has become one of Canada's leading comprehensive universities with 35,000 full- and part-time students in undergraduate and graduate programs. Waterloo, as home to the world's largest post-secondary co-operative education program, embraces its connections to the world and encourages enterprising partnerships in learning, research and discovery. In the next decade, the university is committed to building a better future for Canada and the world by championing innovation and collaboration to create solutions relevant to the needs of today and tomorrow. For more information about Waterloo, please visit www.uwaterloo.ca.
Image with caption: "Abhinay Kondamreddy, a nanotechnology engineering graduate from the University of Waterloo, developed Neverfrost along with three classmates. Neverfrost is an environmentally-friendly technology that prevents frost, fog, and ice formation. (CNW Group/University of Waterloo)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20131210_C9387_PHOTO_EN_34802.jpg
Image with caption: "Raqib Omer, a Waterloo Engineering graduate, developed Smart Scale which uses exclusive hardware wirelessly paired with GPS-enabled smart phones to track the location of a maintenance vehicle and amount of salt dispensed, and logs the information on a cloud-based system in real time. (CNW Group/University of Waterloo)". Image available at: http://photos.newswire.ca/images/download/20131210_C9387_PHOTO_EN_34803.jpg
SOURCE: University of Waterloo
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