November 2007 Archives

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There were over 2300 attempts to post comments to my blog on Saturday alone,
from a broad range of IP addresses. I'm turning commenting off, for now. It looks like an attack, as the comments were empty of spam.

Ants by the sea

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Ants by the sea 6


Originally uploaded by iwoolf.



Giant metal ants attacking a car at Bondi Beach

Riotsquad

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Riotsquad


Originally uploaded by iwoolf.



Public Order and Riot Squad at the Queen Victoria Building in Sydney. I snapped this on Tuesday, after watching the car scream up George St in full siren and flashing lights. It was followed by a police car. I'd be very interested to find out what disturbance in Public Order they were attending to in the QVB.

Over at scitoys.com they have detailed instructions on how to make your own solar cell at home from ingredients you can buy from a hardware shop.

Basically you buy some cheap copper sheeting. Cut two pieces.
You heat one piece for 30 minutes until its covered in thick blackness.
Let it cool slowly for 20 minutes in the air, so the blackness will flake off easily.
Gently remove the black bits under the tap. Don't scrub or it won't work.
Attach an electrical lead to each copper plate with an alligator clip.
Put the two plates in a container with hot water with table salt dissolved in it.
Clip the heated copper plate to the negative and the clean copper plate to the positive terminal of your ammeter.
Expose to sunlight and watch your panel generate microamps of electricity with no fuel!

The flat panel version uses a CD case for the container

How much power does it generate? Simon Quellen Field says:
"Don't expect to light light bulbs or charge batteries with this device. It can be used as a light detector or light meter, but it would take acres of them to power your house. The 0.0000125 watts (12.5 microwatts) is for a 0.01 square meter cell, or 1.25 milliwatts per square meter. To light a 100 watt light bulb, it would take 80 square meters of cuprous oxide for the sunlit side, and 80 square meters of copper for the dark electrode."


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Recent Comments

  • Adam A. Ford: After a summer of speaking to potential presenters and collaborating read more
  • Ian: I'll check the data and get back to you. From read more
  • Matthew Hall: Energy density? Number of charge cycles? Safety issues? Sounds like read more
  • Raz: Wow, it's Sterling's "German nanotech" (from Heavy Weather I think). read more
  • Matthew Hall: This looks like a great find Ian, I'll be viewing read more
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