To turn rain into drinking water, get a solar panel to capture the sun’s energy and charge a car battery to operate an ultraviolet lamp and a ceramic filter to clean the water.
The brainchild of Ateneo Innovation Center (AIC) director Gregory Tangonan, also executive director of the Congressional Committee on Science, Technology and Education, SolaRain was developed by AIC’s operations officer Paul Cabacungan and engineer Jun Granada.
“With the battery, there is no need for [additional] electric power to make the system work,” says Cabacungan.
When Tropical Storm “Sendong” hit Cagayan de Oro and habagat-induced rains devastated Marikina and Quezon cities, SolaRain proved invaluable. Fourteen areas in the country now have SolaRains.
To view farmlands, forests and disaster sites from the air, use a miniature plane or helicopter with a camera. Skyeye is an unmanned aerial vehicle made by Matthew Cua, Roy Bayot, Happy Alampay and Vinni Canos.
With the support of Mayor Leonardo Javier, Skyeye studies areas in his municipality of Javier, Leyte. Soon, Skyeye will help the Department of Science and Technology evaluate coconut watersheds in Marikina River and the World Food Program map mangrove forests in Cagayan Valley.
“Mangroves are useful in disaster-prone areas and, with Skyeye, we can see which places need to be reforested,” says Cua, AIC’s managing director.
To build the “greenest vehicle in the world,” team up with Gawad Kalinga to build a lightweight bamboo bike that runs 30 kilometers on lithium ion battery and meets European environmental standards. Hopefully, the bike will be available soon in the market.
To manage wastewater with no carbon footprint, use the papyrus plant to filter sewage. Further disinfect it with activated charcoal, silica sand, gravel and rocks. The system developed by Granada and Abigail Favis results in water that the Philippine Institute for Pure and Applied Chemistry deems to have fewer bacteria and, after further ultraviolet treatment, good for irrigation. Ateneo de Manila University’s Marian Garden and Matteo Ricci Study Hall have the system installed.
Intellectual combat
Tangonan, who worked in Hughes Research Laboratories in the United States and was featured in my book “Ten Outstanding Filipino Scientists,” is a consummate innovator. When he returned to the Ateneo, he infected scientists with his enthusiasm for innovation.
Initially, Tangonan worked mostly with faculty and students in the electronics and communications engineering department. When the AIC opened in 2009, people from other departments—computer science, management information systems, chemistry, environmental science, legal management, development studies, fine arts in information design, among others—joined in.
“Our process of innovation, research and commercialization is simple,” says Tangonan. “We look for good ideas from ourselves, from our partners and from around the world for products, services and models. We would then spend a year on research and development to create prototypes and proof of concepts. As an open innovation center, we show these to our close partners and get feedback, buy-in and investment. We work and work until something gels or vector into another direction that has more promise.”
“Innovation takes a certain kind of silliness or craziness and intellectual combat, which are not normal in our culture,” says Cua. “But we need high-quality people who believe in and breathe innovation. A school can pour millions of pesos into developing a place, getting pretty labs, but without real innovators, it would get nowhere…
“We create an open and fun atmosphere. Our door is always open. Our only rules are: Be respectful of everyone’s work, do not break anyone’s trust, be prepared, ask questions. Everyone starts as an amateur, and there is no such thing as a dumb question, though if you did not do your homework, shame on you.”
Improving lives
Erich Villegas and Daniel Legazo launched Tele-rehab (a blend of Wii and Kinect technologies), with the University of the East Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Medical Center, to help the physical rehabilitation of stroke patients.
“Stroke patients often need therapy, but they may stop after a couple of weeks because they don’t see results,” says Cua. “With Tele-rehab, we can track their progress and give them feedback.”
Luis Sison, head of the University of the Philippines Enterprise Center, joined John Paul Azcueta, Justin Sumulong, Daniel Laipinig and Marky Villanueva in adapting the technology to help runners analyze their motion and gait. Mike Syson and his team at the Ateneo Java Wireless Competency Center created Usbong, which uses smartphones to help blind people utilize audio feedback to evaluate their health.
Not all innovations have a serious goal. Byron Raymundo, Marion Tan, Dawn Corpuz, Enzo Pepito and Aaron Macaren created Molinollo chocolates.
Aspiring to the standard of KitKat Japan, the artisanal chocolates have “more exciting Filipino flavors” such as pili, mango, queso de bola, cornick, chili flakes, spicy dilis.
Chemistry department chair Nestor Valera, together with Abigail Chen, Merridith Gaw and Therese Tuballa, invented No Trace spray to remove dirt from LCDs or glass screens. Biodegradable and nontoxic, it is even “safe enough to drink,” says Chen.
No Trace is available at the Ateneo Loyola Schools Bookstore.
After monitoring the fishkill in Lake Palakpakin, one of Laguna’s Seven Lakes, AIC built machines to increase oxygen content in the lake.
“We are doing the science,” says Cua, “but we are also working with social scientists to assess the developmental profile of the lakes.” The project has attracted the interest of other countries.
Marek Sison, Dayanara Simon, Christine Tero, Matt Santa Maria and Aia Sia created Viva la Laguna, a simulation-role playing game to monitor the well-being of the lakes. “Most people seem not to care,” they say, “but perhaps only because they don’t know how to start. With this game, anyone can save a lake.”
Visit the AIC site at https://innovation.ateneo.edu/bin/view/Main/WebHome, e-mail at aic@admu.edu.ph or call 426-6001 loc 5635.
E-mail the author at blessbook@yahoo.com.