Below are pictures of the first trial.
Results:
- Over one inch visible spark,
- Electrons can be heard jumping to objects up to 7″ from sphere,
- Hair raising sensation felt as much as 13″ inches from sphere.
Materials:
- Press board “base platform” and “motor housing.”
- Model airplane motor and 12 volt battery. [Any motor to drive the pulley will work]
- 3 foot 4″ pvc sewer pipe to make your column tube
- pvc pipe for bottom pulley
- rubber band
- nylon roller for top pulley with nylon pvc spacers
- copper ground wire and brush 1/8″ from bottom pulley
- collector brush 1/8″ from top pulley with copper wire leading to sphere (space 1/8″)
- 13″ plastic hamster ball [surface crevices smoothed with Bondo and painted with metallic copper paint]
- Housing and pipe painted and coated with polyurethane
Caution:
Electrons accumulate around this machine. Do not use near computer equipment or devices sensitive to static electricity.
Building the Van de Graaf (VGM) Machine:
- Build the wood “motor housing” on a wood “base platform” to fit the motor. (See pics below)
- Cut a wood “top plate” to fit on top of the motor housing.
- Cut a hole in the “top plate” to fit the column tube into snugly.
- Cut a hole in the top of the “motor housing” 1/4″ smaller than the top plate hole. This will serve as a platform for the column tube.
- Place cut pvc pipe onto motor [you will have to modify according to the motor setup]
- To make top pulley, slide nylon roller onto a 16 penny nail that is ground down on both ends to make an axle. Slide nylon spacers on both sides of the nylon roller.
- Note: taper the sides of the rollers slightly so that the rubber band will position itself in the middle and not slip to the edge.
- Cut a V notch into opposite sides of the top of the “column tube” to fit the roller axle (a cut nail).
- Fix motor into housing so that pvc roller is centered with the top plate hole.
- Measure the length of a rubber strip to fit around top and bottom rollers. Cut ends and super glue them together to form a giant rubber band. Place over the rollers. It should stretch onto the rollers so that it does not touch the sides of the column when in motion.
- Make two brushes by soldering cut strands of wire onto a copper wire. The length of the brushes should match the rubber band width.
- Attach the bottom brush to motor housing with a bolt, nut, and washer.
- Bend brush to about 1/8″ from rubber band.
- Attach top brush to “column tube” with bolt, nut, and washer. Copper wire should lead from brush to the sphere through holes in the “column tube.”
- Purchase a plastic pet hamster ball, fill holes and crevices with Bondo, and paint with metallic paint. I used copper paint.
- Disassemble and paint the base, motor housing, and column. After painting, coat with polyurethane.
- Reassemble and turn it on!
Wood housing for motor and roller |
Motor mounted to base platform |
|
Experimenting:
- Try different spheres, length of column, brush sizes, metallic paint, rubber band materials, different positions of brushes.
- Troubleshooting:
- Air too humid
- Rubber band touching the column
- Correct materials used for rollers
- Brushes close enough to rubber band
- Copper wires from top brush touching sphere
- Clean rubber band and rollers
- Moisture (sweat) on your hand and arm
Having fun:
- Look for the eventual accumulation of dust on the VGM due to charged particles.
- Feel your hair pulled toward the sphere
- Listen for electron wind as you bring a screwdriver, hand, or object close to the sphere
- Tape 12″ string or tissue to top of sphere, then watch it follow your hand.
- Notice that after turning off VGM, paper tissue is still charged. Discharge it by touching the sphere.
- Tie a nut to the end of a string and bring it close to the sphere
- Put your hand on the sphere and watch your hair stand up
- Place hand on sphere and hold hands with friends
- Hold a flourescent light bulb in one hand while touching the sphere.
- Make aluminum foil hats for the sphere and turn VGM
- Blow soap bubbles at the VGM sphere
- Touch sphere while wearing the flashing tennis shoes
- Tape an aluminum foil cone to the top of the VGM and watch for St. Elmo’s fire at night
- Make an ion beam gun by taping a paper clip to the sphere.
- Float a balloon toward the VGM.
- How long a spark can you get from your VGM? The longest spark I have gotten so far is two inches.
Interesting observations
- Experimenting in the dark will give you more interesting visual observations.
- In the dark, I was able to see the tip of my finger nails light up (St. Elmo’s Fire) as I held them near the sphere.
- In the dark, I could see electrons glowing from objects near the sphere surface.
- You can get bigger sparks jumping to a dryer arm than a sweaty palm.
- We consistently got an eight inch spark playing with the help of the string.
- You get better results if people do not “crowd” the VGM and objects are not near the VGM.
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