TU Engineering female students take part in BAE Systems and their male counterparts come home with trophies

date of publication : 2019-06-10

TU Engineering female students take part in BAE Systems and their male counterparts come home with trophies

Female students from the College of Engineering participated in the annual graduation ceremony for distinguished graduation projects awarded by the Saudi BAE Systems. The exhibition included projects presented on distinguished models in engineering applications in such areas as renewable and sustainable energy, nanotechnology, artificial intelligence and automation, communication and electronics technology, smart roads and industrial cities. Below are some of TU’s winning projects:

  1. Designing a new generation of pulse generator circuits for the Rogozki file. This was actually used in applications to locate faults in smart power distribution networks.
  2. A smart robot system for the removal of dust from PV solar panels at low cost and high performance.
  3. A smart robot system to determine the appropriate location of the blast pit for use in mining applications. The project was used in the Al-Duwaihi mine in the Makkah area. The robot was designed to measure the blast holes using a small prototype to be used as evidence of the concept. Based on the design and implementation process, it is now possible to locate the blast pit with precision and very high efficiency.
  4. Creating new models using a built-in beam that aims to reduce the time and cost of construction by using a special steel and concrete compound where the resistance system is a gear structure consisting of a bottom shaft on a steel plate.

 

Through its partnership with Taif University, BAE Systems has supported the policies of complementarity, cooperation and achieving national goals under the umbrella of knowledge transfer through training, skill development by supporting student projects, exchange of experience, direct discussions and workshops.