Course Meeting Times
Lectures: 1 session / week, 3 hours / session
Labs: 1 session / week, 3 hours / session
Course Aims
- Energy literacy
- Knowledge of energy usage and challenges in developing regions
- Real-world capability to design, build, implement, and evaluate off-grid energy systems
Course Objectives
- Have physical intuition for different energy sources and associated units.
- Understand the engineering principles behind and have direct hands-on experience with a variety of energy technologies common in developing regions (e.g., biomass-based cooking fuels, diesel generators, micro-hydropower, solar photovoltaics, small wind turbines, etc.).
- Evaluate the utility and trade-offs for different energy options in a multi-objective environment, including system-level considerations.
- Understand the practice of design for the other 90% including consideration of local adaptability and socio-economic impacts.
- Design & build simple, off-grid energy system using co-creation with local stakeholders.
Course Structure
The course is comprised of three sections based on the aims and objectives described above.
During the first seven weeks, the focus of lecture and lab sessions will be a hands-on experience developing energy literacy, knowledge of energy usage and associated challenges in developing regions, and the capability to build, model, and analyze off-grid energy systems.
During spring break, students will have the opportunity to travel to Nicaragua and El Salvador to learn first-hand about energy in a developing country, implement small projects or trainings, and identify larger projects to be worked on in the remainder of the class and beyond. This trip is entirely optional and not a formal, credit-bearing part of the class, but highly recommended. Students are expected to contribute $500 toward the cost of the trip; if that amount is prohibitive due to a financial hardship, you should make an appointment with Amy Banzaert to discuss.
For the remainder of the class, students will implement projects in conjunction with their community partners in Nicaragua and El Salvador. There will be one formal design review associated with the project; final presentations both in class and then in the group presentations for all D-Lab classes at the end of the term.
Credit & Grading
D-Lab Energy is a 12-unit undergraduate class: 3 hours/week in lecture, 3 hours/week in lab, and 6 hours/week on homework, readings, language, and design projects. Your presence and attendance in class is essential: every session will involve in-class activities that are very difficult to replicate or make up outside of class.
This seminar is graded on an A/B/C/D/F basis; furthermore it is a class where your work is impacting the lives of people in Nicaragua and we expect an appropriate level of commitment.
COURSE WORK | GRADE WEIGHTS |
---|---|
Course engagement (attendance, participation in both in-class and online activities) | 25% |
Assignments (readings, homework, labs) | 25% |
Quizzes | 20% |
Design project (10% final prototype & report, 10% participation, 10% assignments) | 30% |
Readings
Required text: [Polak] = Polak, Paul. Out of Poverty: What Works When Traditional Approaches Fail. Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2008. ISBN: 9781576754498. [Preview with Google Books]
Other readings will be assigned for individual topics and class sessions.
Hablamos Españgles
Because we will be traveling to Nicaragua and El Salvador over spring break and working with Spanish-speaking community partners, it is important that all students know at least a tiny bit of Spanish. If you don't speak Spanish fluently, you should plan to spend no less than 20 minutes/week working on your Spanish. We recommend Coffee Break Spanish, a free podcast for beginners to intermediate speakers (starting at whatever week seems like it matches your skill), or Show Time Spanish, a free podcast for more advanced speakers. Each show is 15-20 minutes long. 20 minutes/week won't get you very far, so if you can sneak in more, please do so (with the podcast format, it's easy to listen while walking around campus).
In addition, we will speak "Spanglish" in D-Lab Energy. The usage will be very basic and relatively infrequent but will give a taste of Spanish. Students who speak Spanish well are encouraged to help everyone else in the class (including instructors!) improve their Spanish.
Muddy Cards
After each class, students will submit "muddy cards" to request more discussion or clarification, and to provide frequent and timely feedback to the instructors. This reference gives background about the goals and methodology of using muddy cards:
- Worldwide CDIO Initiative. Muddiest Point in the Lecture (Muddy Cards) (PDF)
Guidelines for Project Work During 2nd Half of Term
There will be a lot of "free" time in class for project work. You still need to come to class on time and work for the entire time; instructors and mentors will be stopping by regularly to meet with your team and help you. If you will not be working in the classroom, you should leave a note on the classroom whiteboard stating where your team will be and including a cell phone we can use to track you down if need be.
Wiki Design Notebook
Each week, your team should update your team's Wiki page.
Design Review
Your design review will include 10 minutes to present your project, and then 15 minutes for discussion and questions. You should bring and demonstrate your working prototype.
Final Presentations
The final presentation session will consist of three parts: A 1 minute presentation, a poster session, and finally a 20 minutes design review (10 minutes of presentation followed by 10 minutes for discussion). You should bring a working, good-looking prototype for demonstrations.
Calendar
Part 1: Foundations - Lectures and Labs
WEEK # | CLASSES | LABS | ASSIGNMENTS DUE* |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Lecture 1. Introduction: Energy, units, estimation, energy usage world-wide | Lab 1. Human Power | Problem Set 0 (Lantern) |
2 |
Lecture 2. Energy storage & micro grids Initial trip planning | Lab 2. Energy Storage |
Reading reaction Problem Set 1 Lab 1 write-up Trip project survey |
3 |
Lecture 3. Lighting Community partner introduction | Lab 3. Biogas & biodiesel lecture & construction |
Problem Set 2 Lab 2 write-up |
4 |
Lecture 4. Solar thermal & PV Quiz I | Lab 4. Solar panel construction, installation, and operation |
Reading reaction Community partner outreach |
5 |
Lecture 5. Wind & micro-hydro Trip planning | Lab 5. Savonius wind turbine construction & testing |
Reading reaction Problem Set 3 Lab 4 write-up 1st brainstorm pictures Literature search |
6 |
Lecture 6. Cooking, stoves, & fuel Biogas digester testing | Lab 6. Charcoal making & stove testing |
Reading reaction Lab 3 and Lab 5 write-ups Initial project specifications 2nd brainstorm pictures Materials list for trip |
7 | Lecture 7. Trip plan presentations | Trip preparation |
Lab 6 write-up Revised project specifications Revised 2nd brainstorm pictures Trip questions |
8 | Spring break trip to Nicaragua and El Salvador community partners |
* Assignments are due each week on the Lab day unless otherwise noted. Students should anticipate spending 6 hours per week on assignments, including listening to no less than one ~20-minute Spanish podcast/week.
Part II: Project Work
WEEK # | CLASS TOPICS & PROJECT WORK | Project Milestones |
---|---|---|
9 |
Lecture 8. Design Process Trip presentations, project evaluations Team formation & brainstorming |
Trip report Select project Team roles assigned |
10 |
Quiz 2 Librarian visit Experimentation overview |
Concept review Wiki Design Notebook report: best brainstormed ideas, Pugh charts Project specifications due |
11 | System-level design |
System spec review Wiki Design Notebook report: sketch models & experimentation |
12 |
Detailed design and build Initial design review presentations |
Critical design review with initial working prototype Wiki Design Notebook report |
13 | Testing and refinement | Wiki Design Notebook report |
14 |
Testing and refinement Final design review presentations | Final presentation and review at the D-Lab Showcase |
15 | Production ramp-up | Final project report & team assessment |