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Aloe Vera as an Alternative Energy Source
Author(s) -
Dewa Alvario Sihombing,
Lisna Yulianti,
Eka Cahya Prima
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
indonesian journal of multidiciplinary research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2776-608X
pISSN - 2776-5970
DOI - 10.17509/ijomr.v1i1.33680
Subject(s) - renewable energy , aloe vera , energy source , electric potential energy , voltage source , alternative energy , energy (signal processing) , environmental science , voltage , process engineering , electrical engineering , computer science , waste management , engineering , mathematics , botany , statistics , biology
Energy is a basic human need. In Indonesia, fuel oil (BBM) is the most widely used energy source in meeting national energy needs. The composition of Indonesia's national energy consumption in 2015, namely BBM: 52.50%; Gas: 19.04%; Coal: 21.52%; Water: 3.73%; Geothermal: 3.01%; and New Energy: 0.2% (Kholiq, 2015). To reduce the use of non-renewable energy, we are trying to find a solution to overcome this problem, namely by using Aloe vera as a source of electrical. This research focuses on the type of circuit and the number of sets of electrodes to produce an optimal source of electrical energy. In this research, we are using an experimental method that aims to determine whether Aloe vera can be an alternative renewable energy source. The first condition is one leaf, series circuit. The second condition, two leaves with a parallel circuit. The third condition, three-leaf with a parallel circuit. The results of this study are that the more electrodes, the more voltage is generated. By assembling in parallel, the resulting current is greater. From our study, we hope Aloe vera has potential as an alternative energy source and it can reduce the use of non-renewable energy.

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