Copied from the Vanguard:
Nothing is really a waste in the real sense of the word.
Almost anything one can think of is reusable. Everything has some value one way
or the other. This was what four teenage secondary school girls in Lagos set
out to prove.
Disturbed by the incessant deaths of Nigerians, most of the
time, an entire family, from carbon monoxide poisoning from fossil-fuel
generator, the yo-yo movement of petroleum products prices, environmental degradation
and the recent fuel subsidy scam, four Senior Secondary School II students of
Doregos Private Academy, Ipaja, Lagos, decided to find solution to the problem.
In a chat with Vanguard Learning, the girls – Duro-Aina Adebola, Bello Eniola,
Akindele Abiola and Faleke Oluwatoyin, shed some some light on the project and
what they hope to achieve. Excerpts:
An idea is born:
Said Duro-Aina Adebola, leader of the group; “I read on the
internet that a family of five died of carbon monoxide poisoning so I asked
myself what could be done to reduce these incessant deaths from carbon monoxide
poisoning?
“We were always encouraged to bring up ideas to help solve
human problems so one day, we were in the Guest Room of our school; we thought
of what could be done to solve this problem. We thought of what we could use to
power the generator instead of using the conventional fuel, something that can
replace conventional fuels and that will not release any obnoxious substance
like carbon monoxide into the environment; something that will also be cheap
for Nigerians. You know that when the issue of fuel subsidy removal came up,
there was hike in prices of petroleum products,” she said.
‘A problem well stated is a problem half solved,’ according
to Charles Kettering, so having identified the problem, the girls moved on to
seek solution.
“We started looking at various materials. We looked at water
but we felt that the amount of voltage it will take to break the water molecule
is large and we wanted something small so we can have a larger output. We
decided to look at waste products because Nigerians always opt for something
they won’t have to spend their money on. So we started looking at different
materials, one of which was urine. We were looking for something that is
liquid, something that has hydrogen molecules in it. We also observed that the
amount of voltage it takes to break a urine molecule is less than the amount it
takes to break the hydrogen molecule in water. So we opted for urine since we
have a higher output,” she said.
The generator:
“The generator is a conventional fuel-based generator. It
combusts slower than the hydrogen gas so we had to retard the ignition of the
generator. We actually retarded the back-timing on the generator by 11
degrees.”
Components:
“We have an electrolytic cell, water filter, an empty gas
can, borax and our retarded generator. The electrolytic cell is an old
battery cell we got from the junk yard; we removed the contents of the cell and
then used perforated stainless steel mesh as the electrodes so urine is placed
in the electrolytic cell, where it is electrolysed, releasing hydrogen-oxygen
gas mixture. This mixture then goes into the water filter. The water filter is
to remove any impurities that might have come in with the gas and then it goes
into an empty gas cylinder which serves as the gas storage.
“The gas cylinder pushes hydrogen into a cylinder of liquid
borax, which is used to remove the moisture from the hydrogen gas. Borax serves
as a drying agent and this is because we do not want lots of moisture going
into the generator. Also, borax helps to remove any other impurities that might
have come in with the gas. The purified hydrogen gas is then pushed into the
generator,” she explained.
Asked how much it will cost to acquire a unit, she said;
“It’s something we are still working on because this is a prototype which cost
us about N4,000 apart from the generator. We are working on improving this so
it can just be our own generator, a Nigeria-made generator that works based on
urine.
Advantages: For this generator, the exhaust gas is the water
vapour. It does not emit carbon monoxide like the normal fuel-based generator
so this ensures clean environment for Nigerians. Again, one litre of urine can
give you six hours of electricity.
Appeal:
“We are appealing to people to build up on what we have
done. They should take up the idea and help us to improve on it so that it can
be something that can be in every Nigerian home because this was not made to be
lying around; it was made to be used by Nigerians. All we need is support so we
can take it to the next level. We want a situation where every home can have
this. We also want to make it compact so you don’t have to have different compartments,
they can all be in a single unit that can just be attached to a generator.”
Other projects:
The students are currently working on other projects like
bomb detecting radar, motor bike safety device and also paper from maize straw
(agricultural waste), to save our trees and environment.
4 comments:
Great Job! Students from Doregos Private Academy, Ipaja.
i applaud you! great job you've done ladies... more grease to your elbow. God bless you!
Well done girls, let God see you through, it's only unfortunate that the Nigeria Government will see this and look the other way round, they will only be interested in building a N40b mission house, so painful!
Well done! I wish I have students like them, feeling the urgency to make changes to the current global issues... May God bless them along the way with ppl who are willing to help them to realize their wishes.
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