Close
Florida Polytechnic University seniors Dorian Alberti and Sean Goins work on a model of a robotic windshield washer intended to quickly spray lovebugs and other road debris from the fronts of vehicles at rest areas and trucks stops.

Hate lovebugs? Florida Poly students work to make them less of a nuisance

January 24, 2020

Driving down Florida’s highways during lovebug season can be irritating, distracting, and even dangerous. Swarms of the insects can engulf vehicles, rapidly leading to poor visibility once they hit the windshield.

A team of Florida Polytechnic University students is developing a device for the company Omni Pressure Cleaning that will quickly clean vehicles of lovebug debris and get drivers safely back on the road. The effort is the team’s capstone design project.

Dorian Alberti, a senior majoring in mechanical engineering, said in addition to obstructed windshields, lovebug splatter can block vehicle sensors, limiting the functionality of tools such as object proximity sensors.

“Our sponsor was in his Ford and it told him to pull off the road because his sensor caught the debris,” said Alberti, a native of Madison, Florida. “That’s when he thought about creating something that would clean your windshield or bumper sensors to let you be on your way.”

The solution the seven-member team is working on is an arm attachment for water tanker trucks that would swing down and allow nozzles to quickly spray a windshield or bumper to remove road and insect debris.

“It’s cool to be able to apply what we’ve learned at school to this project and put it into a real-life situation,” said Sean Goins, a senior mechanical engineering major from Plant City, Florida.

Goins and Alberti are currently working to determine material selection, flow rate, and nozzle design and movement. Once they’re done with the mechanical engineering portion of the project, it will advance to other Florida Poly team members in the areas of electrical engineering, computer science, and computer engineering.

“Our computer engineering and computer science team members will work on computer vision and automation to allow sensors on the arm to detect your vehicle and map it out so it doesn’t bump it into you,” Alberti said.

The robotic windshield washer team will present its project at the Capstone Design Showcase to be held at the end of the spring semester.

“The potential for this project is huge,” Alberti said. “You can almost picture trucks on the side of I-4 at rest stops and you pull in front of one and it cleans your windshield and you’re on your way.

“It’s like a pitstop, but for your windshield.”

 

Contact:
Lydia Guzmán
Director of Communications
863-874-8557

Session Details

This session will demonstrate that practical risk management is for everyone, regardless of a formal program. Attendees will learn actionable and simple strategies that are easy to implement, enabling them to start immediately by focusing on their top risks to build greater operational resilience and ensure the sustained success of their auxiliary enterprises.

Presenter Profile

Michelle Powell serves as the pioneering Risk Manager at Florida Polytechnic University, the state’s sole 100% STEM-dedicated institution. Having been with the university for nearly 11 years, Michelle transitioned from a leadership role in Admissions in October 2023 to establish and evolve the risk management function from the ground up. In this solo capacity, Michelle builds robust frameworks for our dynamic, young university, overseeing our insurance portfolio, consulting on third-party and event risks, and developing critical campus-wide training programs. Michelle has obtained the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) Enterprise Risk Management certificate and the Associate in Risk Management (ARM) and Construction Risk and Insurance Specialist (CRIS) designations. Her distinct background in mathematics and engineering, combined with extensive higher education leadership, brings an analytical and strategic approach enhancing the institution’s resilience.