
ݮƵ project wins top honours in Dyson competition
James Dyson says Medella Health’s smart contact lens shows how good design and engineering can improve lives
James Dyson says Medella Health’s smart contact lens shows how good design and engineering can improve lives
By Carol Truemner Faculty of Engineering(Left to Right) Medella Health co-founders Maarij Baig, Harry Gandhi and Huayi Gao
A that monitors glucose levels captured one of two international runner-up awards in this year’s , the third University of ݮƵ student project to win a top prize in three years.
, co-founded in 2013 by Huayi Gao, a ݮƵ nanotechnology engineering graduate, ݮƵ science graduate Maarij Baig, and Harry Gandhi, who studied science and business at ݮƵ, is developing a contact lens to continuously monitor glucose levels in the tear film for diabetes management. The information collected is sent to a user’s mobile phone so the individual can better manage glucose levels throughout the day.
In judging the ݮƵ project, James Dyson, the British inventor of the bagless Dyson vacuum cleaner, said the smart contact lens has the potential to help millions of people with diabetes by removing the need to invasively test blood.
“It really shows the way that good design and engineering can improve lives,” said Dyson, for whom the award is named. “I was particularly impressed at how the team condensed the technology into such a small format without compromising the product.”
Medella Health, which operates out of the University’s in downtown Kitchener, will receive $7,500 to further develop its product in addition to the $4,000 the company secured earlier this year as the national winner in Canada.
“By using the money we were awarded as the national winner in Canada and now as international runners up we will further optimize the technology,” said Gandhi.
Medella Health currently includes 15 experts in nanotechnology, health IT, micro-electronics and micro-fabrication. The company hopes to begin clinical testing of the smart contact lens next year and eventually expand it to monitor other biomarkers, ranging from heart disease to stress management.
Gao, who began working on the smart contact lens as a fourth-year nanotechnology engineering design project, said Medella Health is proud to be part of the University’s entrepreneurial ecosystem.
“We are incredibly lucky to have access to the expertise and facilities of three world class laboratories within the University of ݮƵ – the ݮƵ Institute for Nanotechnology, and the ,” said Gao. “Velocity also played a crucial role by supporting Medella with free space, industry veterans and technology gurus.”
Open to university students and recent alumni in the fields of product design, industrial design and engineering, the James Dyson Award is an international challenge to design something that solves a problem.
University of ݮƵ teams have taken top honours in the past two competitions. Last year, won first-place overall with its desktop sized circuit board printer that turns design files into prototype boards in minutes. In 2014, was an international runner up with its colour changing marker that alerts a user when sunscreen is no longer providing protection.
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The University of ݮƵ acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.