A startup company with deep roots at À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Engineering won the top prize in a pitch contest focused on the use of nanomaterials to create or improve commercial products.
, which designs battery-free water leak detection systems for healthcare and industrial applications, took home $10,000, plus a spot in a virtual incubator, in the Nanomaterials Virtual Pitch Contest staged by not-for-profit NanoOntario and CMC Microsystems, a not-for-profit managing Canada’s National Design Network®.
One of the first commercial products by AquaSensing is an extremely low-cost, battery-free water leak sensor for use in homes and condominium buildings.
The technology was developed by engineering professors George ShakerÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýNorman Zhou, and is being commercialized by a number of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµÂ mechanical and mechatronics engineering alumni and graduate students – Nathan Johnston, Nimesh Kotak, Ming Xiao, Connor Al-Joundi, Kushant Patel, Mohammad Rouhi, Kamalpreet Kaur and Simran Chathanat – as well as fourth-year engineering student Erin Roulston.