It's a tragedy that happens multiple times every year: An average of 38 children die
each year after being left in hot cars. Five recent Rice University
graduates have designed a new car seat accessory that can not only
protect infants accidentally left in hot cars but can also notify
caregivers and emergency personnel.
Audrey
Clayton, Rachel Wang, Jason Fang, Ralph LaFrance and Ge You, who
graduated from Rice May 16, spent the past year working at Rice's Oshman
Engineering Design Kitchen to develop Infant SOS,
a car seat accessory to protect infants left in potentially lethal hot
cars. The device is fitted into standard car seats and can issue
auditory, visual and text alerts when it senses that the infant is in
danger. It also features a passive cooling system designed to keep an
infant's core temperature below a critical point (heat stroke begins at
104 degrees Fahrenheit) until emergency responders arrive.
Clayton said it’s no surprise that most of the tragic incidents involving children left in cars occur in the summer months.
The
alert system is the accessory's primary means of protection and
includes sensors to detect if the car is moving, if the child is still
in the seat and if the temperature in the vehicle begins to rise. If the
device detects that the car is parked with the child still in its seat,
the device's alert responses will be activated after 30 seconds,
beginning with visual and auditory alerts. The visual alert is a
flashing row of red LED lights that lines the car seat and the audio
alert is an alarm. After five minutes, if the infant has not been
removed from the seat, text alerts are sent out. The device can be
programmed to send texting alerts to up to 10 people, including
emergency responders.
In case of delayed responses, the cooling system can act as an emergency backup to extend the infant’s chance of survival. A heat-triggered material acts as a main heat absorber to keep the infant's core temperature at a safe level for as long as possible.
The
project was funded by Dr. Susan Baldwin '82 through her company, Mamoru
Enterprises LLC. She proposed the senior design project after learning
that the child of one of her patients had nearly died in an overheated
car.
A
past Design Kitchen team originally developed the project in fall 2013,
but the current team has worked to include the cooling system and
improve the alert component. Another team will work to streamline the
device's alert system during the 2015-2016 academic year. The students'
ultimate goal is to make the removable accessory easy to use and
accessible to a large market. The students expect the device to cost
approximately $150.
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