ou
are an electrical engineering student working on a project involving the
coupled-tank system. Probes inside the tanks indicate on an external scale
that the water levels in the two tanks are not the same. You need a little
more water to balance the inflow and outflow rates. Working on your PC
at home, you tune the control system that regulates the pumps to add water
to one tank. And presto! The flow rates match, the baffle closes and the
water level is finally level.
(Picture on right: The virtual laboratory allows the
user to conduct experiments on the coupled-tank system)
Welcome to the Web-based world of virtual laboratories (VLAB), a pilot
scheme launched in the Faculty of Engineering at the National University
of Singapore. A virtual laboratory allows students and lecturers to conduct
and test various control strategies for both teaching and research.
For months, electrical engineering undergraduates have been logging on
to the university's virtual laboratory in their own time and from the
comfort of their homes. All it takes is a powerful PC and the standard
Web browsing software.
“The concept of virtual laboratories has been around for many years.
However, whilst other virtual laboratories use simulation, we have developed
it using real-time video feedback. You are able to make use of the mouse
device to manipulate the control buttons and knobs of the instrument captured
on camera at the actual site," explained Professor C C Ko of the Department
of Electrical Engineering.
Ko and colleague Professor B M Chen have spearheaded a seven-member team
to develop the system.
Rather than simulating what is happening in the real world, the system
operates in real-time the video and audio representations of the actual
instrument and apparatus located in the department’s physical laboratory.
This is done through an audio-video server subsystem that includes monochrome
and colour cameras for video capture, and microphones for audio capture.
The captured video and audio representations are processed and temporarily
stored in the audio-video server subsystem before they are transmitted
to the computer for downloading and displaying. You can zoom in or out
and even rotate the object up, down, left or right using this server.
“Users, whether they are students or researchers, can have only half
an hour to work on the instruments. However, this time limit may be changed
depending on the complexity of a particular project. Since the system
is available 24 hours a day, users can log on any time. We now have researchers
and students logging on to our system from all corners of the earth,"
explained Ko.
There are three virtual experiments available on the VLAB site. One is
the coupled-tank experiment, and the others are experiments related to
the use of an oscilloscope and a spectrum analyser in communications.
Said Ko: “So far, feedback to the VLAB has been positive. Minor problems
like accessing difficulties do happen now and then. Most of the time,
it's because the browser and some of its components have not been set
up properly. Sometimes, the problem is with the software. You do need
properly configured software and the right PC speed to work on these experiments."
With the oscilloscope experiment, undergraduates can measure remotely
through the Internet various circuit responses such as amplitude, frequency,
phase and step responses of some common circuits. Operation of the instrument
is simple. Students simply have to connect the circuit by dragging the
relevant lead and cables or control the instrument by turning knobs and
pressing buttons using their mouse devices. They may also wish to work
on more extensive research by keying in parameters for an experiment in
the user interface. “Students who have problems working in the virtual
laboratories can simply e-mail their lecturers.
“Alternatively, users may also find from an online ‘frequently-asked
questions' solutions to their problems," Ko explained. However, even with
the many benefits of virtual laboratories, Ko is certain that virtual
laboratories will never replace classroom teaching.
“My prediction is that there will be more virtual laboratories in the
future. Perhaps five years down the road, one-third of the experiments
may be done virtually. However, the virtual laboratories are not established
to replace face-to-face teaching but to allow the students to carry out
the experiment before or after the real session," said Ko. “Virtual laboratories
can only augment the lecturers’ teaching tools. It can’t replace them."
The virtual laboratory seems to be here to stay.
|