At the heart of the struggle to retain and attract new teachers is restoring a sense of dignity to the profession. Beneath political finger-pointing, that goal is shared by a wide swath of Americans.
If you鈥檝e been to a science fair, then you鈥檝e seen high schoolers standing beside trifold foam boards and 3D models. Most will go home, some to next-level competitions, a few to the forefront of solutioneering.
Robert Sansone belongs in category three. The 17-year-old high school senior from Florida is 16 iterations into his synchronous reluctance electric motor. Next focus: 鈥渕inimizing torque ripple.鈥澛
Robert鈥檚 larger aim: to make the manufacturing of the motors that drive electric vehicles (EVs) greener. A recent did a pretty good job summarizing his work, he says in a private exchange on LinkedIn, where he describes himself as 鈥渁 life-long builder and designer.鈥澛
But why wade into such a competitive, big-player realm 鈥 one with complicated growing pains?
鈥淚 was watching a video on 鈥 EVs, where the issue with rare earth elements in their electric motors came up,鈥 Robert writes. That bothered him. 鈥淲e are moving away from the problems with fossil fuels, but are now moving into this new problem with rare earth elements.鈥
Robert knew motors existed that didn鈥檛 require such elements, the extraction of which carries environmental and human costs. Research taught him that such motors lack the performance needed for EVs. That鈥檚 where Robert鈥檚 work comes in.
For an assessment of his prospects I turned to Eric Evarts, a former Monitor auto and tech writer. Eric hails Robert鈥檚 breakthrough engineering (also recognized as such ), adding caveats that surely hover around Robert already. Beating the performance of existing coil-wound motors is one thing. Matching the rare-earth permanent-magnet motors that EV makers use now? Hard to do (if even possible), or to scale.
Robert isn鈥檛 backing down. Not yet in college, he has some torque of his own 鈥 and plans for patents. 鈥淪eeing the day when EVs are fully sustainable due to the help of my novel motor design,鈥 he tells Smithsonian, 鈥渨ould be a dream come true.鈥