D
dave e
Guest
Hi,
I teach a highschool chemistry class, and recently had my students
construct copper oxide solar cells. These run at approximately a
quarter of a volt, and produce between 0 and 700 microamps, depending
on the quality of the cells, amount of sunlight, etc.
Problem is, most of the multimeters at the school read in units of
mamps. I have my own personal multimeter that is sensitive enough to
read microamps, but I don't have enough to go around the whole class.
Is there a simple electronic circuit which can be used to amplify this
signal in a linear way, so that it can be read in milliamps? Is this
enough current to switch on a transistor? Are there transistors
available the approximate a linear amplification in this range?
Dave
I teach a highschool chemistry class, and recently had my students
construct copper oxide solar cells. These run at approximately a
quarter of a volt, and produce between 0 and 700 microamps, depending
on the quality of the cells, amount of sunlight, etc.
Problem is, most of the multimeters at the school read in units of
mamps. I have my own personal multimeter that is sensitive enough to
read microamps, but I don't have enough to go around the whole class.
Is there a simple electronic circuit which can be used to amplify this
signal in a linear way, so that it can be read in milliamps? Is this
enough current to switch on a transistor? Are there transistors
available the approximate a linear amplification in this range?
Dave