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An Engineering 102 student conducts field repairs on a solar oven.

UA Engineering Students Turn Up the Heat

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UA Engineering Students Turn Up the Heat

April 4, 2011
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A record-breaking April 1 temperature of 95 degrees Fahrenheit was not the only source of sizzle on the UA campus that day.

Teams from ENGR 102 gathered outside the Arizona State Museum and used the sun's energy to power solar ovens they had designed and built in what course organizers billed as a "solar oven throw down."

One team achieved an oven temperature of 571 degrees Fahrenheit, but it was too hot for the oven materials, which smoked and smoldered under the intense heat. The cookie dough that had been placed in the oven was reduced to a blackened cinder.

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Graham Kobza, pictured, and his team got their oven up to 571 degrees Fahrenheit before it caught fire. Kobza's teammates were Eric Watters, Karl Peterson, Bryce Lowry, and Serena Li.

Heat isn't everything in this contest, however, and the best-in-show award went to a team named "Engineering Gone Wild." Solar ovens were judged based on creativity, functionality, and aesthetics.

Engineering Gone Wild consists of students Kyle Laursen, Trevor Leahy, Alex Moser, Eric Moser, and Sree Prathipati. Adjunct lecturer Jennifer Horner of the systems and industrial engineering department supervised the team.

"This event is important because it wraps up a 6-week unit on solar energy and mathematical modeling to develop a prediction for what temperature these ovens will reach," Horner said.