May 27, 2022

Wildcat Wind Power notches first-ever win at DOE's Collegiate Wind Competition

Posted May 27, 2022 10:00 AM
Members of the Wildcat Wind Power team at the 2022 Collegiate Wind Competition pose with their awards after taking first place overall. From left: Israel Barraza, Michael Brosseit, David Pierson, Jakob Long, Hayden Dillavou, Andrew Dulac, Kavian Kalantari, faculty advisor Hongyu Wu, Brianna Wagoner, Matthew Monsion, Eric Christman and Josh Meurer. 
Members of the Wildcat Wind Power team at the 2022 Collegiate Wind Competition pose with their awards after taking first place overall. From left: Israel Barraza, Michael Brosseit, David Pierson, Jakob Long, Hayden Dillavou, Andrew Dulac, Kavian Kalantari, faculty advisor Hongyu Wu, Brianna Wagoner, Matthew Monsion, Eric Christman and Josh Meurer. 

Written by Grant Guggisberg

  Kansas State University's Wildcat Wind Power team won the 2022 Collegiate Wind Competition, at a U.S. Department of Energy event in San Antonio May 16-18. It's the first time the university has won the competition.

The K-State team battled 11 other schools to claim the top prize in the yearlong national competition. The team designed, built and tested its model wind turbines throughout the academic year before presenting and testing the models in a wind tunnel at the event, which was in conjunction with the American Clean Power Association's CLEANPOWER 2022 conference and exhibition.

Hongyu Wu, faculty advisor for Wildcat Wind Power, was pleased to see the team's hard work pay off. "I am so proud of our team's effort in this competition," Wu said. "The chief judge was very complimentary of the team's performance, saying the turbine testing performance was the best he had seen since the inception of the DOE Collegiate Wind Competition."

The competition is divided into four contests that test the skills of the team on its ability to create a viable model, along with rating the team's design and presentation skills, its ability to design an offshore wind farm and its effectiveness in wind-related outreach.

K-State placed in the top half of each contest, winning in turbine testing, taking second in turbine prototype, fourth in connection creation and fifth in project development to finish with the highest overall score.