Springfield News-Sun

Now preparing for national competitio­n in June.

- By Brooke Spurlock Contact this reporter at brooke.spurlock@coxinc. com.

A Cedarville University senior has built an under- water robot, one he “knew that he wanted to complete (because it) had never been done successful­ly.”

Jared Ritzo, from Virginia Beach, Virginia, built the underwater, remote-oper- ated, vehicle (ROV) as his capstone project, which is required for graduation.

“This was a very lofty capstone idea, one that would be difficult to accom- plish because other col- lege students from previous years had attempted to make an underwater robot without reaching a success- ful conclusion,” Ritzo said. “Our team wanted to prove to everyone that it could be accomplish­ed, and we were committed to mak- ing that a reality.”

Ritzo’s vision for the cap- stone project started the summer before his senior year when he worked as an intern at Oceaneerin­g, a global technology com- pany in Houston, Tex., that specialize­s in underwater robotics.

During his internship, Ritzo saw “firsthand the need for technologi­cal advancemen­ts for ocean conservati­on and explora- tion,” so when he returned to Cedarville, he gathered a team of seniors interested in underwater robotics and pitched his capstone idea to his professors.

The university’s under- water robotics team includes Ritzo, Ben Schultz, of Metamora, Michigan; Daniel Cavallaro, of Cal- laway, Maryland; Jackson Chairvolot­ti, of New Hartford, Connectict­u.; and Christophe­r Tooill, of Sabina, all senior mechan- ical engineerin­g students; Noah Lukinovich, of Cedarville, and a junior graphic design student; and Sarah Rhoades, of Bellevue, a senior marketing student.

The project was granted provisiona­l approval by Dr. Tim Norman, distinguis­hed professor of mechanical and biomedical engineer- ing, and Dr. George Qin, associate professor of mechanical engineerin­g.

The team then had to find a pool that would allow them to test their ROV each week throughout the year, in which Ritzo had a four- day deadline to secure one or they would have to find a different capstone project.

They quickly found the indoor pool at the YMCA in Xenia, where leaders said they could use it every

Thursday in exchange for meeting with boy and girl scouts in the area to show them various STEM designs.

“We were excited about the opportunit­y to test our capstone project while also investing in the lives of young students,” Ritzo said. “This was a perfect scenario that allowed us to work on an incredible capstone project that could provide significan­t benefits, and at the same time, serve young students.”

The team then began building the ROV as well as the parts for it “from the ground up.” For exam- ple, Ritzo said, they built a tether spool, which is used to communicat­e with the robot in the water because it can’t be wireless, out of wood and an undergroun­d burial Ethernet cable, which are normally sold for hundreds of dollars.

The robot is built from raw materials like PVC, aluminum brackets and 3D-printed materials, and everything is connected with underwater wires that allows the robot to move in the water and pick up var- ious objects, all of which is controlled by a separate computer.

Now preparing for the National Underwater Robot- ics Competitio­n (NURC) at Arizona State University in June, the team will have 20 minutes to drive the robot through various tunnels underwater and grab non-radioactiv­e nuclear fuel rods that they will then have to put in a box and move to a specified loca- tion. The number of rods they grab and objectives they complete determines how many points the team gets and the winner of the competitio­n.

“Everything is done underwater. We can’t watch the robot, as we will be behind a curtain,” Ritzo said. “We operate the robot using only our computer screens and our controls, all which is away from the water.”

Every year senior mechanical engineerin­g students at the university complete a required capstone project before graduation, which allow students to combine their book knowledge with practical skills they’ll use in their profession­al careers.

Projects throughout the years have varied from building race cars and rockets to creating a medical device that can save a person’s life after experienci­ng a severed carotid artery, which is currently pending FDA approval.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D/PHOTOS BY SARAH RHOADES AND SCOTT HUCK. ?? Cedarville University’s Underwater Robotics Team tested its remote-operated vehicle (ROV) at the Xenia YMCA.
CONTRIBUTE­D/PHOTOS BY SARAH RHOADES AND SCOTT HUCK. Cedarville University’s Underwater Robotics Team tested its remote-operated vehicle (ROV) at the Xenia YMCA.

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