Sherbrooke Record

Breathere ventilator design makes top ten

- By Taylor Mcclure Special to The Record

The Breathere ventilator design developed by the collaborat­ion between Bishop’s University, Université de Sherbrooke, Cégèp de Sherbrooke, and various businesses in the region for the Code Life Ventilator Challenge has been selected as a top ten finalist for the competitio­n.

The Code Life Ventilator Challenge was organized by Dr. Reza Farivar, who occupies the Canada Research Chair in Integrativ­e Neuroscien­ce, and Stuart Kozlick, a Professor of Practice at Mcgill University, to design easy to use and easily manufactur­able ventilator­s to quickly fill in what has become a major need in the midst of the COVID-19 health crisis.

The three educationa­l institutio­ns recognized an opportunit­y to contribute to their community and they put together a team of 19 people to take on the challenge.

“We built a ventilator that is extremely easy to manufactur­e,” said Bruno Courtemanc­he, a Bishop’s University professor involved in the project. “We used food grade industrial components, we know the life cycle of these parts and how they react in different conditions, most of the parts are from industrial components and some are really simple physical concepts that we built and designed.”

They used water columns to regulate the pressure of the airflow that goes into the lungs. “There were three. There was one for the safety and overpressu­re and one for the minimal pressure to keep inside of the lungs. When we put air in the lungs we have to make sure there is enough pressure to keep the lungs open, and one for the maximum pressure given inside of the lungs also.”

Courtemanc­he was in charge of fine tuning the designs and he highlighte­d that it was a group effort that made the design possible. “It was Bishops, Université de Sherbrooke, Cégèp de Sherbrooke, and people from several companies so it was really a team effort from different institutio­ns and companies.”

After building their porotype and entering their final submission, which consisted of 280 files, they were chosen to be amongst the top ten finalists. “The competitio­n had about 2,600 participan­ts and about 1,000 teams from 94 countries and from these 1,000 teams we were one of the ten selected teams,” emphasized Courtemanc­he.

“The prototypes are all currently being tested in Montreal at Mcgill’s Medical Simulation Centre and they are testing to make sure the prototypes are following regulation­s and requiremen­ts to be used as medical ventilator­s.”

The top three designs will then be selected and made available to manufactur­es all over the world. “They are supposed to be available to everyone and if any company wants to build one they can, but they will pre-select different manufactur­ers,” explained Courtemanc­he. “Each finalist can look at the applicatio­n of different manufactur­es and say we want them to build it or this manufactur­e doesn’t seem fit to produce the materials. It’s just to make sure that we have enough parts around the world to build the ventilator­s.”

The selected designs will be eligible for up to $200,000 from manufactur­ers and other organizati­ons.

The group of inventors is waiting patiently to find out the results of the prototype testing. “We don’t know yet but we are confident,” emphasized Courtemanc­he.

 ?? YOUTUBE/COURTESY ??
YOUTUBE/COURTESY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada