The Use of an Innovative Jig to Stimulate Awareness of Sustainable Technologies among Freshman Engineering Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Context
Semester 1 | Semester 2 |
---|---|
Digital Literacy | Health and Safety: Principles and Practice |
Academic Literacy and Communication Studies | Electrical Installation Practice |
Mathematics I A | Power Generation and Storage |
Electrical Engineering I | Solar Energy Systems II |
Applied Physics of Energy Conversion | Small Wind Generation |
Solar Energy Systems I | Mathematics I B |
3. Innovative Jig for Demonstrating PV Module Operation
- A 10 W PV module mounted on an aluminium structure (F) where its tilt angle can be varied (E);
- A USB connector (G) from an ARDUINO microcontroller located in a watertight box with specific selectable load resistors (D) to enable the sensed data to be viewed and recorded in LabVIEW on a PC;
- A mechanism to adjust the distance of the light source to the PV module (A);
- A switch where the two lights can be switched on or off individually (B); and
- Two 500 W halogen lights (C) which serve as the light source.
- It is an open-source project where the software/hardware is extremely accessible and very adaptable;
- It is flexible and offers a variety of digital and analogue inputs/outputs, serial interface and digital and PWM outputs;
- It is easy to change and update the program as it connects to a PC via USB and communicates using standard serial protocol;
- It is an inexpensive microcontroller for which the software is freely available; and
- It has a large online community with a lot of references, example source codes and libraries to refer to.
Date | Time ms | Current mA | Temp °C | Angle ° | Voltage V | Light int relative |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
26 May 2015 | 4800 | 50.13 | 34.34 | 1.09 | 15.14 | 89.35 |
26 May 2015 | 5000 | 50.13 | 34.34 | 1.36 | 15.14 | 89.36 |
26 May 2015 | 5200 | 50.13 | 34.36 | 1.36 | 15.14 | 89.36 |
4. Practical Experiments and Their Associated Visual Results
- It provides students with opportunities to develop their problem-solving skills and
- It may serve as a tool for thinking and problem solving.
4.1. Incident Angle of Illumination
4.2. Temperature of the Module
4.3. Shading
4.4. Maximum Power Point of a PV Module
4.5. Light Intensity
5. Student Perceptions
Module | Solar Energy II |
---|---|
The following represents the percentage of students who agreed that the practical experiments: | |
Were enjoyable | 92% |
Were relevant to the theory | 83% |
Helped them to apply their new knowledge | 84% |
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Hertzog, P.; Swart, A.J. The Use of an Innovative Jig to Stimulate Awareness of Sustainable Technologies among Freshman Engineering Students. Sustainability 2015, 7, 9100-9117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7079100
Hertzog P, Swart AJ. The Use of an Innovative Jig to Stimulate Awareness of Sustainable Technologies among Freshman Engineering Students. Sustainability. 2015; 7(7):9100-9117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7079100
Chicago/Turabian StyleHertzog, Pierre, and Arthur James Swart. 2015. "The Use of an Innovative Jig to Stimulate Awareness of Sustainable Technologies among Freshman Engineering Students" Sustainability 7, no. 7: 9100-9117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7079100
APA StyleHertzog, P., & Swart, A. J. (2015). The Use of an Innovative Jig to Stimulate Awareness of Sustainable Technologies among Freshman Engineering Students. Sustainability, 7(7), 9100-9117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7079100