Difference between revisions of "Team:UMaryland/Hardware"

Line 92: Line 92:
 
<p>CHIP1 is our first design and employs, in many respects, a more conventional PCR design. CHIP1 utilizes two peltier units below an aluminium heating block to heat the PCR tubes sitting inside the block. We use a temperature sensor to detect the temperature of the wells in which the PCR tubes are housed. The sensor then reports back to the Arduino unit, which regulates the energy flow to the peltier units, thereby heating and cooling the block and the tubes.</p>
 
<p>CHIP1 is our first design and employs, in many respects, a more conventional PCR design. CHIP1 utilizes two peltier units below an aluminium heating block to heat the PCR tubes sitting inside the block. We use a temperature sensor to detect the temperature of the wells in which the PCR tubes are housed. The sensor then reports back to the Arduino unit, which regulates the energy flow to the peltier units, thereby heating and cooling the block and the tubes.</p>
 
<br>
 
<br>
<p>CHIP2, our second thermocycler, is mostly made out of a salvaged hairdryer
+
<p> THING2, our second thermocycler, is mostly made out of a salvaged hair dryer. We came about this idea when we found that THING2 was not ramping up to the desired temperatures fast enough. Because of this problem, we looked to other options for heating the machine and disassembled a hair dryer to find out how the heating mechanism worked. To our pleasant surprise, we found that the hair dryer was able to reach very high temperatures—much higher than the desired maximum of 95 degrees Celsius for PCR—in a few seconds. We then made a decision to pause construction of THING1 in order to see how successful we could be at making a rapid PCR machine out of a hair dryer. We knew that working on the hair dryer would be much more dangerous and would risk
  
 
<div style="clear:both">  
 
<div style="clear:both">  

Revision as of 15:09, 1 September 2015