Skip to content
Brands Booster
Menu
  • Home
  • Business
  • Cybersecurity
  • Gadget
  • Gym
  • Mental health
  • Nutrition
  • About Us
    • Advertise Here
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Sitemap
Menu

Hackaday Prize 2023: Supercapacitors Let Solar Speaker Work In Darkness

Posted on July 9, 2023

Solar panels are a great way to generate clean electricity, but require some energy storage mechanism if you also want to use their power at night. This can be a bit tricky for large solar farms that feed into the grid, which require enormous battery banks or pumped storage systems to capture a reasonable amount of energy. It’s much easier for small, handheld solar gadgets, which work just fine with a small rechargeable battery or even a big capacitor. [Jamie Matthews], for instance, built a loudspeaker that runs on solar power but can also work in the dark thanks to two supercapacitors.

The speaker’s 3D-printed case has a 60 x 90 mm2 solar panel mounted at the front, which charges a pair of 400 Farad supercaps. Audio input is either through a classic 3.5 mm socket or through the analog audio feature of a USB-C socket. That same USB port can also be used to directly charge the supercaps when no sunlight is available, or to attach a Bluetooth audio receiver, which in that case will be powered by the speaker.

Related Posts:

  • Hackaday Prize 2023: Homebrew Spin Coater Makes…
A speaker's passive radiator next to a solar panel
The solar panel sits right next to the passive radiator before both are covered with speaker fabric.

The speaker’s outer shell, the front bezel, and even the passive radiator are 3D-printed and spray-painted. The radiator is made of a center cap that is weighed down by a couple of M4 screws and suspended in a flexible membrane. [Jamie] used glue on all openings to ensure the box remains nearly airtight, which is required for the passive radiator to work properly. Speaker fabric is used to cover the front, including the solar panel – it’s apparently transparent enough to let a few watts of solar power through.

A salvaged three-inch Bose driver is the actual audio source. It’s driven by a TI TPA2013D1 chip, which is a 2.7 W class-D amplifier with an integrated boost converter. This enables the chip to keep a constant output power level across a wide supply voltage range – ideal for supercapacitor operation since supercaps don’t keep a constant voltage like lithium batteries do.

[Jamie] has used the speaker for more than nine months so far and has only had to charge it twice manually. It probably helps that he lives in sunny South Africa, but we’ve seen similar solar audio projects work just fine in places like Denmark. If you’re taking your boombox to the beach, a sunscreen reminder feature might also come in handy.

Recent Posts

  • Benefits Of Powertec House Health and fitness center
  • Are You Too Fat To Wear A Corset?
  • Obtaining All-natural Treatments For Rheumatoid Arthritis With Nutrition Reaction Screening
  • How to Know When You Are Allergic to Your Girlfriend
  • A Evaluation of the HTN (Health and fitness Through Nourishment) Revenue Prospect
  • A Higher Perspective of Life

Categories

  • Business
  • Cybersecurity
  • Gadget
  • Gym
  • Health
  • Hygiene
  • Immunization
  • Mental health
  • Nutrition
  • Physical health

Archives

  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022

Randomize

Driven by innovation, powered by results
©2023 Brands Booster | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme