Provided by: Paleontological Research Institution |Published on: March 30, 2023
Videos Grades 9-12, ap-college
Synopsis
This video explains the science behind capturing solar energy, while the narrator creates her own small solar cell with a few basic materials, including the anthocyanin pigments in berry juice as a source of electrons.
The video shows how a dye-sensitized solar cell requires the creation of a charge gradient to get electrons moving, which can be provided by energy from the sun.
It also shows how to build a simple circuit to keep the electrons moving through the charge gradient.
This video is a great overview of simple circuits and the necessary components to power electronics.
This topic is incredibly relevant to current engineering designs and energy policies to support renewable energy and combat climate change.
Resources for teachers to gather materials and teach about climate change are linked in the video notes.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should be familiar with basic physics and chemistry concepts such as electrons, voltage, circuits, and energy.
Students should understand the basics of photosynthesis and how plants convert energy from the sun into chemical energy to build their physical structures.
Differentiation
This video is dense with technical vocabulary, so it is highly recommended to create a note-taking guide to help students understand the science behind a solar cell.
Pausing the video every few seconds, slowing the payback speed as the narrator builds the cell, and having students draw an annotated diagram will help with comprehension.
Gather materials or request them from the Cornell Center for Materials Research Lending Library of Experiments (linked in the video notes) to make simple circuits or complete solar cells to help students understand each component of the process.
Biology classes can use this video to connect to lessons about photosynthesis, energy, atomic structure, pH, membrane potentials, the electron transport chain, and ion gradients.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
About the Partner Provider
Paleontological Research Institution
Paleontological Research Institution (PRI) is a national leader in Earth systems science education. They strive to help make sense of the present and potential future climate change, while also increasing understanding of global change in Earth’s past. Their programs focus on systems thinking, understanding scale and learning in your own backyard.
Related Teaching Resources
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