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Could any point me in the right direction for detecting a falling water
droplet electronically? This is being done for a photograph so the water
droplet must free fall without hitting anything. Can't be distorted in any
way. The droplet is not accelerated other then what gravity provides. Only
needs to fall about 1 or 2 feet. This turned into a larger problem then I
first expected. I've tried the following:
1) Laser pointer into a Cadmium Sulfide photocell but the light pretty much
travels straight through the clear water and the photocell doesn't react
fast enough.
2) Infrared beam has the same problem.
3) Built a small two plated capacitor (with air as the dielectric) using
copper clad boards. Measured 27 pf and it would change very nicely when I
held a water droplet between the plates. But when the droplet is traveling
through the air, again it was to fast to get a reaction larger enough to
measure.
I'm going to dismiss hall-effect thinking that water droplets have a slight
electronical charge not a magnetic one right? Maybe I just need to redesign
the detection circuits for the above (capacitor or photocell) to make them a
ton more sensitive. In any case I would love the input of people much
smarter than me
Any help or pointers towards web pages, discussion groups, physics forums
etc would help. I'm not a student here doing home work. Just a guy in my
back room having fun with electronics and his new D70 camera.
thanks
Dan
droplet electronically? This is being done for a photograph so the water
droplet must free fall without hitting anything. Can't be distorted in any
way. The droplet is not accelerated other then what gravity provides. Only
needs to fall about 1 or 2 feet. This turned into a larger problem then I
first expected. I've tried the following:
1) Laser pointer into a Cadmium Sulfide photocell but the light pretty much
travels straight through the clear water and the photocell doesn't react
fast enough.
2) Infrared beam has the same problem.
3) Built a small two plated capacitor (with air as the dielectric) using
copper clad boards. Measured 27 pf and it would change very nicely when I
held a water droplet between the plates. But when the droplet is traveling
through the air, again it was to fast to get a reaction larger enough to
measure.
I'm going to dismiss hall-effect thinking that water droplets have a slight
electronical charge not a magnetic one right? Maybe I just need to redesign
the detection circuits for the above (capacitor or photocell) to make them a
ton more sensitive. In any case I would love the input of people much
smarter than me
Any help or pointers towards web pages, discussion groups, physics forums
etc would help. I'm not a student here doing home work. Just a guy in my
back room having fun with electronics and his new D70 camera.
thanks
Dan