Project

# Title Team Members TA Documents Sponsor
2 Solar Powered Beach Chair
Best Engineered Award
Andrew Gazdziak
Damen Toomey
Emily Mazzola
Ryan Corey design_document0.pdf
final_paper0.pdf
presentation0.pdf
proposal0.pdf
Our project idea is a solar powered beach chair. The idea is to take a plain old beach chair with a canopy and to turn it into the ultimate beach going machine.

Our chair will have a solar panel canopy. This will have two functions: the first will be to extract power from the sun, with the second making sure that user will be shaded from the sun as much as possible; No one likes sunburn.

The chair will have USB ports integrated into the arms. This will provide a lot of flexibility for the user. Suggested uses include charging a phone or e-reader, powering a USB speaker system, or any USB powered device.

One unique challenge we anticipate will be making the electronics rugged, as sand and other debris could get into small places and interfere with the normal operation. This will have to be water resistant, as one quick rainstorm could ruin unprotected electronics. In addition, we will have to integrate everything into a package that will be small and portable enough to easily take to and from the beach.

Here is a chair that we could start with: http://www.renetto.com/v/vspfiles/assets/images/beach-chair-cat2.gif

El Durazno Wind Turbine Project

Alexander Hardiek, Saanil Joshi, Ganpath Karl

El Durazno Wind Turbine Project

Featured Project

Partners: Alexander Hardiek (ahardi6), Saanil Joshi (stjoshi2), and Ganpath Karl (gkarl2)

Project Description: We have decided to innovate a low cost wind turbine to help the villagers of El Durazno in Guatemala access water from mountains, based on the pitch of Prof. Ann Witmer.

Problem: There is currently no water distribution system in place for the villagers to gain access to water. They have to travel my foot over larger distances on mountainous terrain to fetch water. For this reason, it would be better if water could be pumped to a containment tank closer to the village and hopefully distributed with the help of a gravity flow system.

There is an electrical grid system present, however, it is too expensive for the villagers to use. Therefore, we need a cheap renewable energy solution to the problem. Solar energy is not possible as the mountain does not receive enough solar energy to power a motor. Wind energy is a good alternative as the wind speeds and high and since it is a mountain, there is no hindrance to the wind flow.

Solution Overview: We are solving the power generation challenge created by a mismatch between the speed of the wind and the necessary rotational speed required to produce power by the turbine’s generator. We have access to several used car parts, allowing us to salvage or modify different induction motors and gears to make the system work.

We have two approaches we are taking. One method is converting the induction motor to a generator by removing the need of an initial battery input and using the magnetic field created by the magnets. The other method is to rewire the stator so the motor can spin at the necessary rpm.

Subsystems: Our system components are split into two categories: Mechanical and Electrical. All mechanical components came from a used Toyota car such as the wheel hub cap, serpentine belt, car body blade, wheel hub, torsion rod. These components help us covert wind energy into mechanical energy and are already built and ready. Meanwhile, the electrical components are available in the car such as the alternator (induction motor) and are designed by us such as the power electronics (AC/DC converters). We will use capacitors, diodes, relays, resistors and integrated circuits on our printed circuit boards to develop the power electronics. Our electrical components convert the mechanical energy in the turbine into electrical energy available to the residents.

Criterion for success: Our project will be successful when we can successfully convert the available wind energy from our meteorological data into electricity at a low cost from reusable parts available to the residents of El Durazno. In the future, their residents will prototype several versions of our turbine to pump water from the mountains.