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Research Proposal-1

This document outlines a proposal for designing a personal electricity generation system for rural villages in underdeveloped areas. Key constraints include remote locations with no existing electricity or water infrastructure, varied weather conditions, and potential users' limited financial resources. The system aims to provide lighting, heat, radio, and potentially water pumping. It must be affordable, durable, easy to operate, and safe. A team will conduct a feasibility study, preliminary design, and address questions about sustainability, appropriate technology, and technology transfer.

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Sushil Swain
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views3 pages

Research Proposal-1

This document outlines a proposal for designing a personal electricity generation system for rural villages in underdeveloped areas. Key constraints include remote locations with no existing electricity or water infrastructure, varied weather conditions, and potential users' limited financial resources. The system aims to provide lighting, heat, radio, and potentially water pumping. It must be affordable, durable, easy to operate, and safe. A team will conduct a feasibility study, preliminary design, and address questions about sustainability, appropriate technology, and technology transfer.

Uploaded by

Sushil Swain
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Dept.

of Electrical Engineering
Final Project Proposal

Design Proposal for a Personal Electricity Generation


System

Your company designs, manufactures, and distributes electricity generation systems. It has a
world-wide market. It feels that there is a large untapped market for a low-cost “personal” electricity
generation system for persons in under-developed countries. Your company did some preliminary
investigations and compiled the information below. This information is not complete, but the
company wants you to work with it to conduct a design feasibility study and a preliminary design.

Regional constraints: It has found that the following constraints must be met for the villages and
people who would be interested in purchasing such systems:

 There are no nearby electricity sources.


 There is no nearby phone.
 There is no nearby potable water source.
 There is a stream nearby many of the village locations; however, its water flow
level is uneven. During rainy season, there is good current. During the rest of the
year it only has enough flow to meet drinking water needs of the village.
 Living quarters are of the “hut” type (e.g., tree branches with a piece of plastic for
a roof). None are wired for electricity. Many of the huts in the “village” are at
distances of 1 km from each other (since they are surrounded by either their crops
or there are mountains in the way).
 Most of the villages are remote, and will take almost a day of driving, plus a 5-6hr
walk in mountainous terrain.
 Diesel fuel or gasoline is prohibitively expensive in most areas (partly due to
problems with transporting it).
 During rainy season there is often no sun during the day, or at most 2 hours of
sun. During dry season it is sunny almost every day and it gets quite hot. At night
it gets cool in most locations since most of the villages are up in the mountains.
 In some locations, since many of the villages are up in the mountains, there is a
relatively constant source of wind. However, that is above the forest canopy in
many cases. And, the company has not done the very expensive survey that would
be required to determine the wind characteristics in the many remote locations.

Electricity Needs: Their needs for electricity are prioritized in the following order:

1. Light: Now, after nightfall, not much can be done. Children go to school
in the morning, and then work in the fields in the afternoon until nightfall.
It would be quite useful to have at least an hour of lighting at night for the
children to read and study. Moreover, the parents would find lighting useful for
crafts-making at night since then they could increase their return from sales at the
market (that is around 20km away).
2. Heat: Heating water for the purpose of water filtration would help avoid the problems
of collecting firewood for that purpose. Heat for cooking would be useful for the same
reason. Heating the hut is probably not feasible (e.g., due to leaks), even though it
would be useful (in the mountains, it gets quite cold at night).
3. Radio: While a battery-operated radio is cheap, it would be better to have one that
could be plugged in. The radio can be used for finding out market prices for crops.
It would also provide news from the capital, and music.
4. Pump: Right now the primary water source is a mountain stream and it is
contaminated. A chlorination system could take care of the problem, but that is
expensive. It is known that if water were pumped from more than 200ft deep in the
ground, fresh potable water would be available. The community could, perhaps, get
the resources from either the government or other sources to get the well dug within
about 5 years (hopefully); however, there is the problem of an electricity source for the
pump. This is a low priority item at this point. It is just on the “wish list.”

There is no hope that the government or anyone else will run electrical lines or a water
supply to the village in the next 20-30 years. Some say that would “never happen.”

Conditions of operation: Most of the huts leak, and there is a long rainy season. There
are long periods of high humidity. Most of the huts have a dirt floor. Temperatures in the
area range from 40 degrees F to 110 degrees F. In the dry season it will be over 100
degrees F every day.

Operators: It must be possible for young children and adults to easily operate the device.
It must be safe. The company is quite concerned about safety and liabilities.

Cost: Here is some relevant information that your company has gathered. Nearly all
persons could not sacrifice more than 1-2 weeks of income for the purchase. Customer
expectations are that the product would operate failure-free for at least two-years of
continuous operation. It must last at least 10 years in total.

Service and repair plan: Discuss a plan for service and repair that is consistent with the
above constraints. What type of warranty can the company offer? What is your return
policy? What qualifies as a valid return (if the device was left out in the rain for a month
and now does not work, does it qualify for a full-refund, or at least a pro-rated one, or for
some credit toward a new device)? What is the outlet for servicing these returns? Keep in
mind that there is no one in this type of village with knowledge of electrical technology,
nor is there anyone nearby with such knowledge.

Competition: You must research who the competitors are. For this you should provide:
(i) a description of their products and their functionality (specification sheets can be put
in an appendix; include URLs); (ii) their cost; (iii) their warranty and support services;
and (iv) their market penetration (what countries, how many devices in service).
Assignment:

Design feasibility/competitiveness study:

1. Assess the competition as discussed above. Provide information to support your


assessment.
2. Develop a strategy to gather more information to support the next stage of the
design process (see comments under “company image” above).

Preliminary design:

1. Provide a preliminary design that best fits the above constraints. Explain how it
meets the constraints. Provide a clear explanation of costs, relative to customer’s
financial condition.
2. Defend your choices against competing technologies.
3. Explain your service and repair plan.

Questions:

1. Explain how the concept of “sustainable development” applies to your design.


Discuss a plan for “design for environment” (see text for an example).
2. Explain how the ideas of technology transfer and “appropriate technology” apply
to your design.

Design Team: You must form a team to complete the project. Your team must have
between 2 and 4 persons on it. All must contribute to the assignment. List on the cover of
the final report the title of the report, the persons on the team, the email address of the
person who holds the master of the electronic document, and the percentage contribution
of each individual.

Report: Type your report using standard font sizes and margins. The main body of the
report must be less than 10 pages, but appendices can be attached (e.g., competitor
product specification sheets). It should be in Word. Submission of your report indicates a
willingness to have it posted on the web (as a sample solution of this problem).
Submission must be done via paper (not electronically). If an electronic version of your
report is needed you will receive an email request.

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