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Journal : International Journal of Electrical Engineering and Intelligent Computing

Sea Water Distillation Design Using Renewable Energy for Drinking Water Andi Muhammad Ilyas; Yuliana Yuliana; Muhammad Natsir Rahman; Mochammad Apriyadi Hadi Sirad; Fahrizal Djohar; Md Hasanuzzaman; Zulaeha Mabud
International Journal Of Electrical Engineering and Inteligent Computing Vol 1, No 2 (2024): International Journal Of Electrical Engineering And Intelligent Computing
Publisher : Universitas Khairun

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33387/ijeeic.v1i2.7346

Abstract

The increase in drinking water needs in Ternate City is ttriggered by very rapid population growth. Population growth has resulted in the conversion of forests into housing which has resulted in reduced water catchment areas. In the end, several locations experienced a decline in water quality from fresh to brackish. To overcome the decline in the volume and quality of clean water, a plan is being made to distill sea water into fresh water. The method used in this research is the experimental method. Solar desalination is a process where solar energy is utilized to putify the fresh water from saline/brackish water for drinking purposes, in charging of the batteries, research laboratories. Experimental results with a distillation flow area of 325 cm with an average volume of 43.7 ml. Tests with a distillation drain area of 650 cm produced 76.0 ml of fresh water. Experiments with a distillation flow area of 975 cm produced an average of 106.3 ml of fresh water. The effectiveness of distillation occurs at the widest drainage. The price of fresh water per milliliter is IDR 1.41 cheaper than bottled water, namely IDR. 6.66 per milliliter. The results of research on the salinity of salt water to fresh water show that the salinity of salt water is 35 ppt, while the salinity of distilled water is 0, this shows that the result of distillation is fresh water that can be consumed.
Performance Visualization of Southbound Interface in Software Defined Networking Fahrizal Djohar; Eueung Mulyana; Suciana Suciana; Andi Muhammad Ilyas; Muhammad Natsir Rahman; Achmad Prajudin Sardju
International Journal Of Electrical Engineering and Inteligent Computing Vol 1, No 1 (2023): International Journal of Electrical Engineering and Intelligent Computing
Publisher : Universitas Khairun

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33387/ijeeic.v1i1.6926

Abstract

Software Defined Networking (SDN) makes Internet network configuration easier by separating the control plane and data plane. The control plane on the controller has information on network devices in the data plane and centrally control these devices. One of the controllers in SDN being developed is the Open Network Operating System (ONOS). ONOS provides interfaces such as Representational State Transfer (REST) Application Programming Interface (API). The ONOS core REST API provides some information from the network connected to it, such as devices, statistics, and the information in JSON file. The primary objective of this study is to develop an interface that simplifies performance monitoring through graphical representation. This involves testing the visualization with various topologies and conducting a comparative analysis of the visualization results across these topologies. The creation of the interface entails presenting statistical data, available in the form of a JSON file from the ONOS controller via the REST API, on the web interface in graphical format. The resulting visualization generates a graph that aligns with the performance characteristics of each topology, reflecting device details, ports, and additional parameters such as the count of sent and received packets, as well as sent and received bytes. The performance visualization outcomes specific to each topology are consistent with the number of connections and are prominently displayed on the web interface. Additionally, this research evaluates network throughput and bandwidth by sending ICMP packet and iperf tests across each topology. Among all the openflow tests performed on various network topologies, it was observed that the tree topology exhibited the lowest network capacity utilization, followed by the leaf-spine topology, and finally the ring topology.