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From Space to Sustainable Spinoffs: USF Muma College of Business Students Win Patenthon Competition With NASA Technology
By Elizabeth L. Brown
TAMPA (February 25, 2022) – A team of students won first
place at the inaugural Patenthon competition, an event where college students took
NASA-patented technologies and turned them into new business ideas that addressed
global sustainable development goals.
USF’s top four-person team — Briana Pando, J. Nathaniel Willis, Pratham Kumar Kaudap,
and Prathyusha Pappi Reddy — took the grand prize for their winning pitch for a device
that uses a nanosensor array chip to diagnose medical conditions by measuring the
human breath.
The team comprised of three USF Muma College of Business graduate students in the
entrepreneurship program and one student pursuing a master’s degree in biotechnology
in the Morsani College of Medicine.
They beat out six other teams who pitched ideas before a panel of judges. They won
an in-kind package to set up a limited liability company and a start-up license from
NASA.
Pando said that while she does not have a business-degree background, she has always
had a keen interest in entrepreneurship and nanotechnology.
“It was a great experience to be involved in the event with such an exceptional team,”
she said. “We had not met before the Patenthon, but we were very compatible with our
goals and quickly learned how to work well with one another.”
Teams were tasked to pitch a new business idea using one NASA-patented technology,
chosen from a list of seven inventions available from its patent portfolio. Under
NASA’s Technology Transfer University (T2U) program, participating universities, including USF, use NASA-developed technologies
in the classroom, allowing student entrepreneurs to build case studies and learn about
commercialization and licensing opportunities.
The available patents cover four main topics: health; environmental and sustainability;
modeling and simulation; and artificial intelligence.
Teammate Willis, who is pursuing a master’s degree in entrepreneurship and applied
technologies, said it was important to begin the design process by first building
empathy for the users.
"Our team chose to focus on undiagnosed conditions within adults and children. Our
proposed product would leverage a nanoarray sensor to detect biomarkers in the breath
and be able to identify underlying health conditions, like diabetes," he said.
Willis added that the experience was challenging yet rewarding.
“I work in health care technology,” he said. “I decided to put my skills to the test
and see if I had what it takes to pitch in front of total strangers. It was challenging
to go from idea to pitch in under 24 hours. They only gave us four minutes to pitch,
but we delivered a powerhouse pitch in just three minutes.”
Pappi Reddy, who is also a graduate student in the entrepreneurship and applied technologies
program, said the competition gave her a chance to see what entrepreneurship is like
in the real-world, outside the classroom.
“Learning entrepreneurship and experiencing entrepreneurship are both two different
things,” she said. “Events like these are where one gets to live like an entrepreneur
and tackle all the tasks and strive to sustain their business.”
The three-day event was held during National Entrepreneurship Week and hosted by Hillsborough
Community College. The USF Center for Entrepreneurship and the Florida SBDC also provided
mentors to help participants.
Aside from USF, students from the University of Tampa, Hillsborough Community College,
Pasco-Hernando State College, the University of Florida, and the University of Central
Florida.