APR 21, 2015 10:41 PM PDT

Sensor detects when a driver is alcohol-impaired and blocks the vehicle

WRITTEN BY: Ilene Schneider
As a strategy to decrease road accidents caused under the influence of alcohol, a group of young students at the Institute of Technology of Cintalapa, Chiapas, (southeast state of Mexico) develops an automotive safety system that detects the alcohol blood level of a person and prevents them from driving.
AlcoStop was developed by three students of renewable energy and five from computer engineering at the Institute of Technology of Cintalapa and aims to avoid car accidents.
The project is called AlcoStop, and emerged from the high incidence of road accidents in Mexico where alcohol is involved. According to data from the National Institute of Statistics, Geography and Informatics (INEGI), there are 77 thousand mishaps of this type per year, equivalent to four cases per hour.
AlcoStop was developed by three students of renewable energy and five from computer engineering at the Institute of Technology of Cintalapa and aims to avoid car accidents.
The system works through a series of sensors placed on the steering wheel, the shift lever and seat, which detect through sweat if the person is intoxicated, if the result is positive the motor is disabled, which prevents the individual to drive. It also has a GPS tracking unit that allows monitoring in real time.
The young entrepreneurs also designed a mobile application that sends a signal to family or friends with the location of the vehicle, "as the car is disabled, some one can go and pick up the driver" cooments Karla Isabel Sánchez García CEO at AlcoStop.
She adds that the system is easy to use, economical and anyone can install it, "the idea is that the person buys it and installs it by themselves, is pretty much like a car alarm focused on detecting alcohol."
It is also practical in comparison to other products, in which a breathalyzer test is needed every time the driver gets in the car. AlcoStop detects the person behind the wheel, if the system does not indicate levels of alcohol, the car will start, but if the driver is under the influence of alcohol the vehicle will remain still.
The youngsters aim to consolidate the project as a company "we have had invitations from the Secretary of Transit from the Chiapas state government to implement our system, but the project is still under investigation," says Karla Sanchez.
"We try to refine sensors, so that they are equally efficient for people who do not perspire much, and thus provide a strong result," she adds.
Students set the end of 2015 as their goal to finish the project and make way for the company, which in it beginnings will be supported by the program for young entrepreneurs, driven by the Government of Chiapas.
The project, assisted by Jorge Bermudez Iván Rodríguez and Eder Toledo Valente Núñez was the winner in the fourth National Technological Innovation Contest 2014 in its Regional presentation. (Agencia ID)
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The above story is based on materials provided by Investigación y Desarrollo.

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Investigación y Desarrollo. "Sensor detects when a driver is alcohol-impaired and blocks the vehicle." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 21 April 2015. .
About the Author
Bachelor's (BA/BS/Other)
Ilene Schneider is the owner of Schneider the Writer, a firm that provides communications for health care, high technology and service enterprises. Her specialties include public relations, media relations, advertising, journalistic writing, editing, grant writing and corporate creativity consulting services. Prior to starting her own business in 1985, Ilene was editor of the Cleveland edition of TV Guide, associate editor of School Product News (Penton Publishing) and senior public relations representative at Beckman Instruments, Inc. She was profiled in a book, How to Open and Operate a Home-Based Writing Business and listed in Who's Who of American Women, Who's Who in Advertising and Who's Who in Media and Communications. She was the recipient of the Women in Communications, Inc. Clarion Award in advertising. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, Ilene and her family have lived in Irvine, California, since 1978.
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