- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/intel-international-science-and-engineering-fair/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Wed, 27 Jun 2018 16:46:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Central High School student mentored by 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock professors wins more than $60k for outstanding research /news-archive/2018/06/27/meghana-bollimpalli/ Wed, 27 Jun 2018 16:46:28 +0000 /news/?p=70957 ... Central High School student mentored by 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock professors wins more than $60k for outstanding research]]> When most people think of tea and molasses, their thoughts don鈥檛 stray any further than the kitchen.聽 Meghana Bollimpalli, a Central High School student who was mentored by two chemistry professors at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, saw the potential to create a less-expensive renewable energy source that has earned her more than $60,000 in scholarships and prize money from science fair competitions. Meghana Bollimpalli, 17, of Little Rock, worked from October 2017 to March 2018 with chemistry professors Dr. Tito Viswanathan and Dr. Noureen Siraj on her high school research project to turn renewable waste materials like molasses and used tea leaves into electrodes for supercapacitors. Siraj, who mentored four high school students during the 2017-18 school year, said Bollimpalli was a talented and inquisitive student with a gift for chemistry. 鈥淭he good thing about Meghana is she is always very interested,鈥 Siraj said. 鈥淲hen a high school student comes in my lab, I want to make sure they don鈥檛 work as a technician without understanding the science behind the experiments. I push them to think creatively about the science. I push them to think a little bit deeper.鈥 叠辞濒濒颈尘辫补濒濒颈鈥檚 novel, low-cost approach for synthesizing materials could greatly cut the production and energy costs of making electrodes for supercapacitors, which are used as energy sources in electronic devices including cars and medical equipment. She found that combining common substances like tea and molasses with nitrogen- and phosphorus-containing salts in a commercial microwave formed a powder that could be used as a coating for electrode-like materials, giving them similar properties of more expensive metals like platinum. 鈥淭here is an increase in the demand for energy due to the alarming rate at which we are using our nonrenewable resources and the increase in population worldwide,鈥 Bollimpalli said. 鈥淭o address this demand, we need to find an environmentally and economically feasible way to store our energy. Supercapacitors are devices that address this demand due to their great properties such as portability, long cycle lifetime, and high energy density. But the problem is, in order for a supercapacitor to actually work, it needs a great electrode.鈥
糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock chemistry professors Dr. Noureen Siraj (left) and Dr. Tito Viswanathan (right) mentored Central High School student Meghana Bollimpalli on her project to create carbon-based electrodes for supercapacitors. Photo by Ben Krain/糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Communications.

糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock chemistry professors Dr. Noureen Siraj (left) and Dr. Tito Viswanathan (right) mentored Central High School student Meghana Bollimpalli (center) on her project to create carbon-based electrodes for supercapacitors. Photo by Ben Krain/糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Communications.

Electrodes in today鈥檚 market are usually made from expensive metals like platinum, gold, and palladium and can cost thousands of dollars. To address this problem, Bollimpalli created carbon-based electrodes for under $1 using renewable waste products such as tea powder and 聽molasses. She won a total of $58,000 in in May at the 2018 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She was one of two Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award winners, taking home $50,000 as one of the top three presenters at the event, which attracted student researchers from 75 countries. She also won $5,000 for the Best of Category award in chemistry and $3,000 for a first-place finish in the chemistry category. So far, 叠辞濒濒颈尘辫补濒濒颈鈥檚 project has won more than a dozen awards at six competitions in three states, winning about $61,000 in scholarship and prize money. She most recently was a Gold Medal recipient at the Genius Olympiad in Oswego, New York, in June. In March, she won a $1,500 scholarship as one of the top two award winners at the State Junior Science and Humanities Symposium in Russellville. At the Arkansas State Science and Engineering Fair in Conway, she won four awards, including the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality Quest Award, which landed her a summer internship with the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality. 鈥淚 am very thankful for everyone who helped me with this project. Science is not an individual project. You have to have a collaboration and have the perspectives of many people,鈥 Bollimpalli said. 鈥淒r. Tito and Dr. Siraj were patient in answering all my questions and proofreading my paper and exploring ideas and concepts with me. Dr. Siraj has a way to telling you things that make it stick.鈥

The best place to do research

Bollimpalli has been conducting research at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock with the help of mentors since she was a freshman. She first worked with Dr. Shawn Bourdo in the 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Center for Integrative Nanotechnology Sciences to create bioplastic samples to address the amount of plastic waste in the ocean. She synthesized bioplastic materials that could be used to create fast-acting biodegradable plastic shopping bags. 鈥淩egular plastics take hundreds of years to degrade, but the bioplastic samples I synthesized biodegraded in a week after you threw them away,鈥 she said. In 2017, Bollimpalli worked with Dr. Anindya Ghosh, professor of chemistry. They used waste carbon dioxide to produce an eco-friendly, less-expensive cyclic carbonates, which are used in lithium ion batteries and pharmaceutical products like lipstick. 鈥淚 want to continue doing research at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock because I have had great mentors and research opportunities here,鈥 Bollimpalli said. 鈥淚 love the professors and mentors and labs. I鈥檇 like to work again with Dr. Tito and Dr. Siraj, and I definitely want to stick within the chemistry department. I am lucky to be one of the few, the professors are willing to mentor. It was a great opportunity to learn so much and to meet all of the people at the international competitions. Getting all of this knowledge before I go to college is going to really give me a step up in college.鈥 The Chemistry Department faculty at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock is highly active in research as evidenced by funded research grants, publications, and patents. At the undergraduate level, faculty in the Chemistry Department mentored 15 Undergraduate Research Signature Experience awardees, all of whom presented at the 2018 Student Research and Creative Works Showcase and some at the Chemical Society National Meeting in New Orleans.]]>
Central Arkansas high school students win big at international science, engineering fair /news-archive/2018/05/23/intel-winners/ Wed, 23 May 2018 18:42:39 +0000 /news/?p=70658 ... Central Arkansas high school students win big at international science, engineering fair]]> Little Rock high school students who took top prizes at the Central Arkansas Regional Science and Engineering Fair held earlier this year at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock recently advanced to the international competition where two students won big awards. Six Central Arkansas students competed at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on May 13-18. They are:
  • Mohammed Abuleum, Pulaski Academy
  • Anusha Bhattacharyya, Little Rock Central High School (ISEF qualifier at State Science and Engineering Fair)
  • Meghana Bollimpalli, Little Rock Central High School
  • Sanjana Padala, Little Rock Central High School
  • Hetvi Shah, Little Rock Central High School
  • Chengyue 鈥淥scar鈥 She, Little Rock Central High School
Meghana Bollimpalli, 17, of Little Rock, received one of two $50,000 Intel Foundation Young Scientist Awards for her novel, low-cost approach for synthesizing materials that could greatly cut the production and energy costs of making electrodes for devices like supercapacitors. She found that combining common substances like tea and molasses with nitrogen and phosphorus in a commercial microwave formed a powder that could be used as a coating for electrode-like materials, giving them similar properties of more expensive metals like platinum. She also took home an $8,000 first-place prize in the chemistry category. She is the first top awardee from Arkansas since 1996. Anusha Bhattacharyya won a scholarship to Arizona State University and a third place $1,000 award in the Earth and Environmental Science category for her research to find a suitable adsorbent using naturally abundant environmentally benign materials to remove nitrophenols from water in an efficient, inexpensive, and sustainable way. 鈥淲e are certainly proud of how well our local students fared in the international competition and how advanced their projects and research were, but that is the nature of STEM disciplines,鈥 said Keith Harris, director of the Central Arkansas Regional Science and Engineering Fair and a science instructional facilitator in 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock鈥檚 STEM Education Center. 鈥These are highly competitive fields, and CARSEF recognizes these emerging scientists whose projects exemplify high degrees of difficulty, thoroughness, complexity, creativity, innovation and effective communication.鈥 The Central Arkansas Regional Science and Engineering Fair 聽is one of several academic competitions for middle and high school students organized yearly by the 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock STEM Education Center to promote STEM as career options. 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock has hosted the regional fair continuously since 2011. 鈥淥ur hope is to give more K-12 students access to and encourage participation in these programs to see what STEM careers are all about, all while increasing support of these programs from the campus and community,鈥 Harris said. This year, about 450 students in grades 4-12 competed in the central Arkansas regional fair. Top winners earned the right to advance to the international fair where they faced competition from nearly 1,800 participants from 75 countries, regions, and territories. The 2019 Central Arkansas Regional Science and Engineering Fair will take place on March 1, 2019. For more information about programs offered, visit ualr.edu/stemcenter Top right photo: Sanjana Padala, Anusha Bhattacharyya, Meghana Bollimpalli, Hetvi Shah, Mohammed Abuelem (Pulaski Academy), Oscar She attend the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Pittsburgh, Penn., on May 13-18, 2018. Photo by Patrick Foley, Little Rock Central High School  ]]>