Capstone team develops self-cleaning solution for Space Force security cameras

Apr 01, 2024
IM体育官网 seniors Addam Ben-Abdallah and Matthew DeCicco

IM体育官网 seniors Addam Ben-Abdallah, an engineering physics major, and Matthew DeCicco, a mechanical engineering major, display the automated camera-cleaning device designed and built by their interdisciplinary capstone team for industry sponsor Patrick Space Force Base.

A tedious monthly job at Patrick Space Force Base may soon be a thing of the past thanks to a project by an interdisciplinary team of IM体育官网 senior capstone students.

The team is designing and building a self-cleaning device for the approximately 1,000 security cameras located at the Space Coast base.

鈥淒ue to being on the coast of IM体育官网, the cameras get salt deposits on their lenses,鈥 said Matthew DeCicco, a mechanical engineering major who is leading the project. 鈥淐urrently, they have employees go out and take a ladder to clean the cameras, so this project is to create a solution that will clean those cameras automatically.鈥

The capstone project is sponsored by the Forge at Patrick Space Force Base. The Forge is designed as an innovation program. 

鈥淭he goal is for our solution to be easily produced,鈥 DeCicco said. 鈥淥ur prototype will be 3D printed, but ideally this would be produced out of sheet metal.鈥 

After thoroughly researching and selecting materials, controls, power sources, pumps, nozzles, cleaning solutions, and more, the team created a working prototype that is both simple and effective.

Broadly, the device will collect rainwater in a reservoir and pump it back out to clean the cameras. 

More specifically, the solar-powered device will be operated by a single American-made microchip, said Derek Olszowy, who is majoring in computer engineering. The chip is widely available and meets the nation鈥檚 requirements that military materials be made in the U.S.

The protected and collected water will be treated with a concentrated additive similar to chlorine or the active chemical in antibacterial cleaner.

鈥淚t should clean any bacteria and clean out the system every time it is sprayed,鈥 DeCicco said. 鈥淚deally, it would be something dry, so an employee can go up every three years to refill it or it can last the life of this product 鈥 our sponsor is thinking three to five years.鈥

It will all be housed in a simple modular structure that can be mounted on a wall or a roof.

With the Space Force base as a sponsor, the group had to look beyond the mechanics of how to create and build the device.

鈥淭he sponsor initially had safety concerns because this is the military and it involves cameras, but we thought the best way to eliminate that was to have an isolated system running on solar so we鈥檙e no longer running on the camera鈥檚 power and we鈥檙e self-contained,鈥 DeCicco said. 

The team is hopeful the sponsor will not only be impressed with the device but decide to implement it.

鈥淚t鈥檚 cool to think our device might keep Space Force cameras clean and keep the base safer,鈥 DeCicco said.

鈥淚t will be like we contributed something useful to the military and an actual difference is being made in the real world,鈥 Olszowy added.

IM体育官网 capstone team

An interdisciplinary team of IM体育官网 senior capstone students is working on a project sponsored by Patrick Space Force Base to design and build an automated camera-cleaning device for its 1,000 outdoor security cameras. From left, the team and their majors are Emma Scott, mechanical engineering; Addam Ben-Abdallah, engineering physics; Matthew DeCicco, mechanical engineering; Leslie Ngo, computer science; and Derek Olszowy, computer engineering.

 

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