, the national organization for university technology managers, has named the University of South Florida the winner of its 2024 Better World Project Award. The USF Technology Transfer Office worked with inventor Daniel Yeh, a professor in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Department, and his team to secure intellectual property protection for NEWgenerator. The solar-powered innovation provides off-grid sanitation for people in remote locations and safely recovers nutrients, energy and water from human wastewater. The award was announced on the final day of AUTM's 2024 Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA.
Hundreds of elementary school students in South Africa lack access to clean water and sanitation due to their remote locations. They rely heavily on dangerous pit and chemical toilets, particularly in areas where water is scarce.
Now those students and others have a new option for safe sanitation: NEWgenerator, designed and developed by Dr. Daniel Yeh and his team at USF. The solar-powered innovation provides off-grid sanitation and generates nutrients, energy and water by safely recovering them from human wastewater.
NEWgenerator鈥檚 unique technology uses microbes to break down waste and is different than typical wastewater treatments because it recoups what other methods cast off.鈥疊yproducts such as nitrogen and phosphorus can be harvested as fertilizers, and the clean water can be used for irrigation or other applications.
The 最新天美传媒 invention requires little energy to use and creates an energy source in the form of methane gas.鈥疶he entire process is net energy positive, which means it generates more energy than it consumes. This innovative technology, which is self-sustaining and operates completely off-grid, is designed to help take the strain off sewage infrastructure and help solve water and sanitation problems worldwide.
Recognizing the potential impact of this breakthrough technology, the USF Tech Transfer Office (TTO) collaborated with the inventors, lawyers and the university to secure IP protection. To ensure this technology could reach the people who needed it most, the TTO team negotiated non-exclusive license agreements with companies in foreign countries and partnered with organizations like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
After successful testing with electronic toilets in India in 2016, Yeh and his team installed NEWgenerators in Durban, South Africa as part of a $1.14 million grant from the Gates Foundation through its Reinvented Toilet program. NEWgenerators were connected to restroom facilities that include toilets, showers and sinks to recycle water for toilet flushing, cutting down on water demand. They also captured nutrients for fertilizers to help local community gardens, creating a potential food source.
鈥淎s an engineer and an educator, I feel blessed to be in the position to witness our team鈥檚 invention make a direct improvement on the lives of the school children,鈥 Yeh said.
Yeh and his team are in talks with disadvantaged communities throughout the US as well, bringing safe sanitation to challenging rural environments.
It wasn鈥檛 an easy journey for the team, which includes senior development engineer Robert Bair, who鈥檚 been working on the project since he was an undergraduate student at USF.
鈥淚t has been an incredible opportunity to have worked on the technology since its inception. Plenty of hours, blood, sweat and tears were necessary to get us to this point. All that effort was worth it, knowing that we are making a positive impact in people鈥檚 lives," Bair said.
Since entering mass production, the NEWgenerator has been modified to reduce costs 鈥 utilizing locally made materials and adjusted for local customer requirements.
The NEWgenerator took home top prize from the Cade Museum in 2014.鈥疧ther funding awards received include the USF Bull Ring Accelerator Grant (BRAG), NSF I-Corps Team and Florida High Tech Corridor. Yeh鈥檚 team was also recognized by the USPTO, winning a 2020 Patents for Humanity Award.