Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Project Update #1

Alright. So far a lot has been accomplished. Here's a list that I'll go in-depth with in a second: we took apart a solar panel (one of those one's people have in their backyard for garden lanterns), we took the solar panel and used it to test our circuit, we tested our thermo-electric cooler's water collecting capabilities, chose our heat sink, tried different cooler possibilities, and came up with our final design(s) for the overall system.

Before I jump into talking about all those things, I'd like to discuss our thought process on the whole subject of "self-regulating water condenser". What we are trying to do is create a system that waters plants on its own. To do this, we are incorporating solar panels, Peltier coolers (which were covered in the previous post), light sensors, etc. And all of these get to be put on a circuit together.

Currently, my experience with circuiting amounts to the most basic of ideas. I've only really ever used resistors, LED's, jumper wires, and power sources. The circuit for this specific system involves more advanced things like transistors (with their PNP or NPN setups) and capacitors, along with the previously mentioned items.
 
http://goo.gl/ITpCEB

Needless to say, it's easy for me to get lost.

So large chunks of my research have been spent looking into the smaller parts of our project, so I can understand what these instruments do. If you're interested, here's a link to some information about capacitors, and one about transistors. The internet has been very helpful in my search to comprehend the reasons why we're using this apparatus. For instance, did you know that RC (resistor-capacitor) Circuits are composed of resistors and capacitors and can effectively make a timed current? Easy-to-understand facts like this are the reason I haven't been completely lost, and there's a plethora of information to be learned.

Let's move on to what Mr. Kennemore and I have completed.


Above is an image of the opened solar panel next to a soldering iron. We had taken it apart to have easier access to the panel's inner-workings. We wanted access to the panel's wires so we could test the panel in our circuit.


After I soldered our wires to the panel's original wires, we used something called "heat shrink". The heat shrink in this case are those grey, rubber tubes hanging off of the red and grey wires in the above picture. We moved the heat shrink of the soldered wire junctions and heated up. Heat shrink shrinks when heated up, so it sealed the junctions. This makes for a smoother wire after soldering, which is always better than wires with frays and bumps.


In this image, we've connected the solar panel into the circuit we made to see if it worked. Mr. Kennemore is holding his thumb over the panel's light sensor. It's hard to see in the picture, but there's a small, red LED towards the right end of breadboard. This LED is lit in the picture, because when the light sensor stops sensing light, it stops storing energy and starts pumping it through our circuit. This is what we wanted. We are trying to make it so that when the solar panel senses that it is nighttime, it will stop collecting energy and send its current through the circuit to our thermo-electric cooler.



The top image of the copper cylinders is a closeup of our thermo-electric cooler (which is actually the small white square the copper is sitting on. The copper is coated in water because we ran current through the circuitry in the square. Manipulating the cooler has been extremely easy. We've been able to effortlessly condense water on it. The only problem is that sometimes we set the wires backwards, which heats up the cooler, but that's easy to fix. The bottom picture is a picture of me putting thermal adhesives on the bottom of a second set of copper cylinders. This one was sprayed with water-proofing, which we were hoping would allow the water to have an easier time dripping.

I want to mention that I messed up a few of the adhesives. They are very temperamental and only like the cleanest of surfaces, or else they will get ruined. Also, if you touch the bottom of the adhesive, it has a high chance of not working. I had to try a few times to delicately peel the plastic off and set the adhesives to the cylinders.


This is our heat sink. Since Peltier coolers have sides that cool and sides that heat up, we needed a heat sink for the side that heats up. This heat sink takes the heat from the cooler and disperses it over a larger surface area, so it cools off faster, thus reducing the chance of our system overheating. This heat sink is huge compared to our cooler, so it doesn't get very hot, whereas our cooler can get very cold.



Last time Mr. Kennemore and I met, we agreed on two final designs. It has been hard mentally visualizing what the final product will be, so he wanted me to draft them. This picture shows me drawing the idea I came up with, where we could drill a metal bracket onto our heat sink, support our circuit box above that, and hang our cooler over a plant as the bracket hangs the entire thing on the edge of a pot. Closeup images are below.


Mr. Kennemore's original design involved conjoining the circuit box to the back of a spike, which could be stuck into the dirt of a potted plant to allow the cooler to drip water onto the plant. In both designs, the circuit box has wiring that leads to the solar panel, which can be placed in places for maximum sunlight during the day.


When we next meet we will focus on building the frame for our cooler. I've also been thinking about other designs that we can try and use that may be more efficient than the two we have already. We'll only be focusing on the general body of our product because we want to see how much room we have to cram our circuit in to (because it depends on the size of our circuit box). We ran into an issue with our circuit. Mr. Kennemore thinks that the transistors we have aren't working the way they should be, so we'll work on fixing our circuit separately from building the body.

So that's all for now. Below our images of my Form B with my signed of hours. If you can't read it very well, it comes out to 576 minutes, or 9 hours and 36 minutes.



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