Microsystem Mechanics  
 
search

UMD   This Site





Winning graduate team design: Elico

Winning graduate team design: Elico

 

In the fifteenth century, artist and engineer Leonardo da Vinci envisioned a craft that flew using a single helix-shaped propeller—the aerial screw—viewed by many as the first vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) machine ever designed.

In 2020, the Vertical Flight Society’s (VFS) 37th Annual Student Design Competition challenged students from across the world to re-imagine da Vinci’s design. Using modern-day analytical and design tools, could students design and demonstrate a feasible modern-day VTOL vehicle based on the aerial screw concept and demonstrate the consistency of its physics.

University of Maryland (UMD) aerospace engineering students rose to the challenge, creating two successful designs—Elico and Samsara—which won first (Graduate Category) and second (Undergraduate Category) in this year’s competition.

UMD’s winning entry in the graduate category, Elico, derived its name from the Italian root for the words “helicopter,” “propeller,” “helix” and “screw,” all rooted in Leonardo’s drawing of the aerial screw.

Developed as a technology demonstrator, Elico was designed as a fully autonomous, manned quadrotor vehicle, and improves on da Vinci’s design by using a tapered aerial screw rotor to provide all lift, thrust and control of the vehicle. A modular framework allows Elico to adapt to changing mission requirements and has hover and forward flight capabilities. According to the team, Elico allows riders to safely and easily experience the genius of Leonardo da Vinci first-hand by using an all-electric power plant, ultralight composite airframe and push button operation.

The graduate team also took the bonus prize for “Best Weight Optimization” in their design.

Graduate Team: Elico
Members: James Sutherland, Robert Brown, Ehiremen Ebewele, Emily Fisler, Katie Krohmaly, Jehnae Linkins, Koushik Marepally, Austin Prete and Ilya Semenov
Faculty Mentors: Drs. Vengalattore Nagaraj, Inderjit Chopra and Anubhav Datta

2020 undergraduate VFS competition designUMD’s undergraduate team Samsara leveraged the aerial screw design, creating a modern autonomous, ultralight and electric quad-copter with four corkscrew rotors made from lightweight carbon fiber.

Undergraduate Team: Samsara
Members: Austin McClelland, Blaise Martineau, Charlie Flanagan, Christopher Savage, James Lynott, Julia Mittelstaedt, Nathan Lloyd, Nick VanZelst and Seong Yun
Faculty Mentors: Drs. Inderjit Chopra, James Baeder and Vengalattore Nagaraj

2020 marks the 19th first place win for UMD graduate students since 1998.

The VFS's annual Student Design Competition challenges students to design a vertical lift aircraft that meets specified requirements, providing a practical exercise for engineering students at colleges and universities around the world and promoting student interest in vertical flight technology. Each winning teams receives a cash stipend, and first-place teams are invited to the VFS’s Annual Forum and Technology Display to present the details of their designs.



Related Articles:
Chopra to Receive Prestigious AIAA Walter J. and Angeline H. Crichlow Trust Prize
UMD Student Team Advances in UAS Competition
UMD Students Cinch First Place in 33rd Annual AHS Student Design Competition
High-Flying Technology to Be Recognized
White Symposium to Examine Role of Helicopters in Society
Clark School Wins Helicopter Design Competition
Ph.D. Student Receives Best Paper Award at VFS 80th Annual Forum
Engineering Students Fabricate Tomorrow’s Solutions Today
Seven Maryland Students Receive Vertical Flight Foundation Scholarships
Alum Named Distinguished Professor of Aerospace Engineering at PennState

August 18, 2020


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

From Composites to Competition: Grad Student Wins at Dance Championship

Reporters Brave Hurricane-Force Winds

UROC Interns Explore Counter UAS, VTOL

Two UMD Students Win Spots in SAMPE University Research Symposium

UMD Team Wins Spaceport America Cup

Designing for Moon Mission

Ph.D. Student Receives Best Paper Award at VFS 80th Annual Forum

Maryland Engineering: Top 10 Among Public Graduate Programs, Six Years Running

Roving Reporter

Students with Entrepreneurial Curiosity: Launch Your Business Idea at Maryland

 
 
Back to top  
ChBE Home Clark School Home UMD Home