Sunday, June 30, 2013

Week 3 Day 5

Today was presentation day! Behold!!!






Here are the slides.

After the presentation we spent the afternoon in an epic brainstorming session and we ended up finishing up our tech fest idea. I think it is a good one and I anticipate it being a much larger success than what we tried last year.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Week 3 Day 4

This morning we started out meeting in the classroom over at Discovery Park to start finalizing our presentation. We put together our power point and made it all pretty. Not hard for three teachers... we do i all the time. In the afternoon we ducked back over to EESAT to retrieve our sensors and clean the place up so you would never even know we were there. After that mission was accomplished we returned to Discovery Park and handed over the laptop to Yixing so that he could extract our data and put it into pretty graphs. The good news is that all of our probes agreed on what happened in the tank over the last twenty four hours and had relatively stable readings (the DO data from cluster 15 was a little dirty but, hey, that's field work...)







So that is confirmation that our clusters seem to be doing what they are supposed to. Stage two is hauling this stuff out to the water research facility and leaving it out there over night to see if we can produce the same kinds of diel curves we generated last year.



After we debriefed the data from the probes we went through the presentation as a group and made some quick edits. After that we ran through everything once to make sure we were all on the same page concerning how tomorrow should look then we called it a day.

Week 3 Day 3

We started out the day in Discovery Park completing the sensor tests and doing one last calibration of the pH and DO. We tried tinkering with the temperature sensor a little bit but the system is pretty "black box" so we ended up just leaving it alone.






Having finally beat the sensors into submission...errrr... completing calibration, we boxed everything up and took a trip over to EESAT. We set up in the wet lab and got all of our probes connected and in the water.




Once we had that set up we got the laptop booted up, connected the coordinator and started running our labview program to collect the data. We monitored it for about a half hour to make sure everything was ticking along smoothly.






So, progress! We are actually doing some tests now instead of just tinkering. That is good news. We spent what was left of the day discussing the presentation for Friday and who would be talking about what.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

For your viewing pleasure...

The mighty Yixing Gu dropping some science on ya...




Week 3 Day 2

Crazy busy day today, although it didn't feel very productive. The sensor clusters are all assembled, which is great news, but once they were put together it was time to start testing them.






They look pretty good and fit very well into the smaller Otter Boxes so that is a success. You can see two generations of our sensor cluster lined up n the pics below. Things started to go a little bit wrong after this point, though.





So far we have a total of five sensor clusters completed and moved on to testing. And that is where we are having trouble. We spent the remainder of the morning getting our clusters, numbered 11-15, to connect to the coordinator and start transmitting data. We were at a complete loss until we discovered that the outlet the sensor was plugged in to seemed to matter. At first we thought it was a distance issue, but that seemed wrong since we were well with in the range of our radio. Mike ran down the hall plugging in clusters and the started working out there. I really don't know why it makes a difference because it wasn't as clear cut as wall outlets vs. surge protectors or something. One wall in the lab powered up the unit but wouldn't transmit. One power strip wouldn't. The hall outlets all seemed to be fine. Anyone who has some insight on this, please feel free to comment. 

Once we had everything transmitting properly we started trying to calibrate the sensors to make sure everything was set up. Temperature was a bit of an issue and we didn't have any good probeware to use for comparison. We will try that tomorrow.




The last hour before we left was spent reviewing all the work we have done and working on ideas for how to present our work this Friday during the midterm presentation. I think we are off to a really good start and  have done a lot of quality work... AND we know how to explain it!



So, overall, good stuff happened today. There is plenty of work left to do, however. 

"But, wait! What's this?" you might ask...



That is phase two, my friends. Details to come...







Week 3 Day 1

Monday was a field trip day! The whole group got together at EESAT and loaded up  in vans to go explore the Greenbelt Corridor of Ray Roberts State Park. There has been a sensor array set up out there for the last couple of years that we were interested in seeing. It is similar to the wireless sensor network we are designing in principal, though the specifics are markedly different. The most obvious difference is that these sensors are monitoring soil moisture and other land based readings whereas we are aquatic. Another major difference is that the sensors here use a Crossbow radio rather than XBee. Aside from the sensor array it was also a pleasant nature walk.








Friday, June 21, 2013

Week 2 Day 5

Today we sat in a computer lab and worked on lesson plans. All day. Not my favorite. Deliah was working on an over all lesson plan for middle school. Mike was doing the same but modifying it for high school. I slapped together a power point for them to include and have been developing a lab activity. *sigh*

HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND!

Week 2 Day 4

Crazy busy day! Spoiler Alert: We got our base sensor clusters done! Ok, so back to the start. We spent most of Wednesday disassembling our test clusters. Today we were focused on getting everything properly attached to our printed circuit boards (PCB) which took some doing.








 Think of it as playing a game that is half putting together a complicated puzzle with tiny pieces and half Operation but with out the convenient buzzer to let you know you screwed something up.We managed to get everything tacked down on the boards in the morning... and then spent the rest of the afternoon trouble shooting why they things weren't working. I will spare you the details because it was something different in each case but it tended to revolve around either messing up the polarity of a component or shorting a connection with solder that bled over with out you noticing. After we cleaned that up we managed to get both stamps on each board to light up.




This was a major success but we weren't done yet. We plugged them all in and ran down the hall to the other lab to check our receiver unit. Sure enough, there were our data strings separated by sensor number just like we hoped! It was a good day.

We aren't done yet, though. What we have done so far is make a set of four sensor clusters that are identical in function to what we designed last year and networked them together. That is great, but not the final goal. Next we are going to work on creating a control system to manipulate water level based on feedback from an ultrasonic sensor and/or alarms based on temperature, pH and DO readings. The basic idea is that if water level is too low add water. If water level is too high bleed of water. If pH, DO or temperature alarms go off then you would flush part of the tank by bleeding off and adding water at the same time. We will keep you posted on how that works out.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Week 2 Day 3

This morning was a lot of effort for very little gain. We spent the first chunk of the day testing what we built yesterday and making sure the calibration was still good. Then we tested the probes all in one bowl of water. Unsurprisingly, it didn't work. All of the sensors use voltage to take their readings and, even when you aren't actually reading, the voltage stays on. So... when you have a probe that depends on a voltage reading next to a separate voltage source the inevitable happens. Bad readings.





We spent the next couple of hours dissassembling what we built yesterday so that we could reuse the circuit stamps for the pH and DO and stripping the thermistor off the old circuit so we could use it as well. No money for more probes and no time to wait for them!


Once we had everything we needed of the old boards we started laying out the new circuits, complete with the hardware switching to make sure we aren't dumping extra voltage into the water.



We took a break and went down to the library to do some more research for our paper and discussed what it was we were really going to write about. It is difficult to explain that you are building a model of a model of a stream. Model inception! So, what are some real world applications? Aside from actual stream monitoring, what about monitoring fish farms!


Eventually we rolled back up to the lab and started soldering up a storm to get more done. We aren't finished yet but we are on track to have all of our sensor clusters operational by the lunch break tomorrow!