Building a tester for solar cell efficiency

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on building a tester for measuring solar cell efficiency, with a focus on whether to invest in expensive equipment like the Keithley Model 2401 SourceMeter or to have students construct their own measurement tools. Participants emphasize the importance of defining educational goals, such as whether to prioritize practical skills for technicians or a deeper understanding of measurement principles. A suggestion is made that a reasonably accurate measurement tool can be built for a fraction of the cost, promoting hands-on learning. The conversation highlights the balance between resource investment and educational outcomes. Ultimately, the decision should align with the intended learning objectives for students in the solar cell research lab.
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I am trying to have students build a tester with sourceMeter, lamp, etc. for solar cell efficiency measurement.

Could someone give me advice on this project?

Thank you very much.
 
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What class/grade level? Do you want a quick classroom demonstration, or a more detailed "lab quality" test?
 
pantaz said:
What class/grade level? Do you want a quick classroom demonstration, or a more detailed "lab quality" test?

Yea this. Making a demonstration should be trivial. Are you asking for help thinking of experiments to perform?
 
I am trying to setup a new solar cell undergraduate research lab. Here is my dilemma: I have a few thousand dollars of lab equipment capital and am trying to make a good decision now. To have students build an efficiency measurement unit for home-made dye-sensitized solar cell, they could learn a lot in electronics, but it would take quite long time and also the efficiency measured with home-built instrument may not be accurate at all. Is it a good investment for Keithley Model 2401 Low Voltage SourceMeter Instrument Price: $2,995.00 (very expensive to us), so students can focus on doing research more rather than building the tool? I don't have any experience in this new area. If you could make some suggestions, I highly appreciate it.
 
It really depends what is the goal of your teaching.
If you are training technicians, who'll be in their job expected to perform efficient measurements with off-the-shelf apparata they are equipped with - buy the box, and focus on measurement methodology and data interpretation.
If you are rather teaching them general approach to measurements, with some focus also on how to design and build their own equipement, and 'how the apparatus work' is more important than 'how to operate given tool' - then ask them to design and build their own tool at 10% of that price.
I believe that reasonable (1%) accuracy tool to measure efficiency of solar cells is easy to build with a budget of $299.50 and skills not much beyond high-school.
 
Ok, I will try to balance this. Thank you, xts, for making the picture clearer to me.
 
I think it's easist first to watch a short vidio clip I find these videos very relaxing to watch .. I got to thinking is this being done in the most efficient way? The sand has to be suspended in the water to move it to the outlet ... The faster the water , the more turbulance and the sand stays suspended, so it seems to me the rule of thumb is the hose be aimed towards the outlet at all times .. Many times the workers hit the sand directly which will greatly reduce the water...
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