Arduino Based Physics and Engineering Remote Laboratory

Authors

  • Vladimir M Cvjetkovic University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Science
  • Uros Stankovic University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Science

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3991/ijoe.v13i01.6375

Keywords:

Arduino, SBC, Remote experiments

Abstract


The concept of remote laboratories exists for some time with increasing importance for contemporary education in various fields and at various levels. Advance of remote labs is based on technology development and conceptual improvements with possible mutual influences such as when new technologies can make new concepts possible. Arduino is a family of small inexpensive single board computers (SBC) based primarily on microcontrollers with added Linux platforms on some boards for improved processing and Internet accessibility. Various shields extend interaction functionality of Arduino boards with environment. A number of other brands with quite similar concepts exist, with Arduino as one of very well-known and widespread. Arduino based remote lab concept relies on “Arduino only” implementation which is possible for many not too demanding applications without usual desktop or similar PC platforms. Such concept has many implications like project cheap price, interconnecting of boards for more demanding tasks, small consumption, autonomy, small dimensions, low installation requirements, which is suitable for applications at remote locations and applications requiring mobility. Hybrid solutions including Arduino or similar boards and other more powerful computer platforms may be optimal for more demanding applications. Programming and application development for Arduino and similar boards are supported by large community of developers and users that provide various libraries, solution examples, forums covering various thematic and application aspects. This paper discusses and presents some hardware and software configurations with Arduino and compatible boards that are used for implementation of experiments in physics and technics. Although the considered remotely operated experiments are different in nature, quite similar hardware and software architectures are used.

Author Biographies

Vladimir M Cvjetkovic, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Science

Assistant professor, basic education in physics, teaching mainly subjects in web programming at department of Mathematics and Informatics

Uros Stankovic, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Science

Department for Mathematics and Informatics, Master student

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Published

2017-01-18

How to Cite

Cvjetkovic, V. M., & Stankovic, U. (2017). Arduino Based Physics and Engineering Remote Laboratory. International Journal of Online and Biomedical Engineering (iJOE), 13(01), pp. 87–105. https://doi.org/10.3991/ijoe.v13i01.6375

Issue

Section

Papers