Ansys Teams Up With F1 in Schools

F1 in Schools creates a positive global impact on F1 and STEM by engaging students of all abilities in engineering competitions.

F1 in Schools creates a positive global impact on F1 and STEM by engaging students of all abilities in engineering competitions.

Team Sonic Boom’s F1 in Schools car design. Image courtesy of Ansys.


Ansys entered into a partnership with the F1 in Schools organization to provide computational fluid dynamics simulation solutions for participating student teams representing 58 countries. F1 in Schools creates a positive global impact on F1 and STEM by engaging students of all abilities in engineering competitions, while introducing future workforce skills and inspiring career opportunities, the companies report. 

Ansys joins F1 in Schools global CAD partner Autodesk to extend an existing strategic partnership that connects students with real-world engineering tools throughout the competition.

F1 in Schools competitions feature teams of school-age students who design, build and race miniature F1 cars using engineering software and manufacturing technology. To be successful, teams need simulation tools to design, test and optimize their race cars. The introduction of Ansys CFD solutions will give student teams exposure to a valuable skillset while unlocking engineering insights that can lead to enhanced race car designs.

“F1 in Schools remains committed to delivering exciting, challenging educational experiences through the appeal of Formula One to raise awareness around STEM, and create memorable experiences for students from around the world,” says Andrew Denford, founder and chairman, F1 in Schools. “Our partnerships with Autodesk, and now Ansys, help students make valuable connections between the power of teamwork and cutting-edge tools to address engineering challenges—skills that will propel them forward in their studies and future professional lives.”

With access to Ansys CFD solutions through Ansys Discovery, students can quickly design and optimize their cars and gain real-world experience at the same time. Several F1 student teams have worked previously with Ansys, including members of German team Sonic Boom. Last season, Sonic Boom reached the global finals and won a high-profile elimination event against the competition’s 16 fastest cars.

“At a certain point during the design process, we realized we needed very accurate simulation to compete effectively, so we contacted Ansys,” says Florian Wolf, design engineer for Team Sonic Boom. “Ansys’ meshing capabilities provided us with positive results overall for our design and allowed us to gain great professional simulation experience. Simulation was our final optimization step and involved running many CFD iterations to secure a perfect result—which was designing the best cars we’ve ever made.”

“We are proud to partner with F1 in Schools in fostering innovation, diversity, and skill development among the next generation of engineers,” says Prith Banerjee, chief technology officer at Ansys. “This collaboration helps nurture future engineering leaders by leveling the playing field and creating gender-balanced and inclusive real-life learning opportunities for students around the world.”

Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

More Ansys Coverage

More Autodesk Coverage

Digitally Designing the Factory of the Future
Artificial intelligence also plays a role in building an efficient, economic plant layout for optimal operations.
InfoWorks ICM 2025 Delivers Enhanced Cloud Simulation Capabilities
The development team has enabled cloud simulation results to be accessible directly from a user’s desktop.
Autodesk Maya and 3ds Max 2025 Released
Updates offer support for open standards and improved modeling, animation, simulation, and rendering capabilities. 
Autodesk Releases 2024 State of Design and Make Report
Autodesk releases a new State of Design and Make Report for 2024, highlighting AI's role.
Ask Your AI: Doomed to Fail or Designed to Print?
Solution providers turn to machine learning to reduce print failure.
Autodesk Company Profile

Share This Article

Subscribe to our FREE magazine, FREE email newsletters or both!

Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.


About the Author

DE Editors's avatar
DE Editors

DE’s editors contribute news and new product announcements to Digital Engineering.
Press releases may be sent to them via [email protected].

Follow DE
#28104