Purpose: 1) to investigate the electrical properties of a diode; and 2) to use a diode to construct an AC to DC converter.

Similar documents
Introduction to oscilloscope. and time dependent circuits

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LAB WORK EE301 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS

Diode Applications Half-Wave Rectifying

On-Line Students Analog Discovery 2: Arbitrary Waveform Generator (AWG). Two channel oscilloscope

Exercise 3: EXERCISE OBJECTIVE

Lab 8 - INTRODUCTION TO AC CURRENTS AND VOLTAGES

ECE 3410 Homework 4 (C) (B) (A) (F) (E) (D) (H) (I) Solution. Utah State University 1 D1 D2. D1 v OUT. v IN D1 D2 D1 (G)

EC-3: Capacitors and RC-Decay

EXPERIMENT 4 LIMITER AND CLAMPER CIRCUITS

Laboratory 3 (drawn from lab text by Alciatore)

Physics 120 Lab 1 (2018) - Instruments and DC Circuits

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LAB WORK EE301 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS

BME 3512 Bioelectronics Laboratory Two - Passive Filters

Wallace Hall Academy. CfE Higher Physics. Unit 3 - Electricity Notes Name

INC 253 Digital and electronics laboratory I

EXPERIMENT 7: DIODE CHARACTERISTICS AND CIRCUITS 10/24/10

BME/ISE 3512 Bioelectronics. Laboratory Five - Operational Amplifiers

Electronics 1 Lab (CME 2410)

EE 110 Introduction to Engineering & Laboratory Experience Saeid Rahimi, Ph.D. Lab 6 Diodes: Half-Wave and Full-Wave Rectifiers Converting AC to DC

Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Circuits & Electronics Spring 2005

BME 3512 Bioelectronics Laboratory Five - Operational Amplifiers

A 11/89. Instruction Manual and Experiment Guide for the PASCO scientific Model SF-8616 and 8617 COILS SET. Copyright November 1989 $15.

UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, JAMAICA SCHOOL OF ENGENEERING. Electrical Engineering Science. Laboratory Manual

PHYSICS 221 LAB #6: CAPACITORS AND AC CIRCUITS

CHAPTER SEMI-CONDUCTING DEVICES QUESTION & PROBLEM SOLUTIONS

AC CURRENTS, VOLTAGES, FILTERS, and RESONANCE

Experiment 6: Biasing Circuitry

Analog Electronic Circuits Lab-manual

AC CIRCUITS - CAPACITORS AND INDUCTORS

Uncovering a Hidden RCL Series Circuit

Electronics I. laboratory measurement guide Andras Meszaros, Mark Horvath

Course materials and schedule are at. positron.hep.upenn.edu/p364

Digital Logic Troubleshooting

PHYS 3152 Methods of Experimental Physics I E2. Diodes and Transistors 1

ECE Lab #4 OpAmp Circuits with Negative Feedback and Positive Feedback

Exp. #2-6 : Measurement of the Characteristics of,, and Circuits by Using an Oscilloscope

Electric Circuit Fall 2017 Lab3 LABORATORY 3. Diode. Guide

Lab 1: Basic Lab Equipment and Measurements

LABORATORY MODULE. Analog Electronics. Semester 2 (2005/2006)

LIC & COMMUNICATION LAB MANUAL

Integrators, differentiators, and simple filters

EE 2274 DIODE OR GATE & CLIPPING CIRCUIT

UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, JAMAICA School of Engineering -

Experiment #2 Half Wave Rectifier

Experiment #2: Introduction to Lab Equipment: Function Generator, Oscilloscope, and Multisim

ME 365 EXPERIMENT 7 SIGNAL CONDITIONING AND LOADING

ECE3204 D2015 Lab 1. See suggested breadboard configuration on following page!

NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITUTE

BME/ISE 3511 Laboratory One - Laboratory Equipment for Measurement. Introduction to biomedical electronic laboratory instrumentation and measurements.

Ohm's Law and DC Circuits

Performance-based assessments for AC circuit competencies

Brown University PHYS 0060 Physics Department LAB B Circuits with Resistors and Diodes

Experiment 5 The Oscilloscope

Electronics 1 Lab (CME 2410) Part I - Diode Clipper

EDEXCEL NATIONALS UNIT 5 - ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC PRINCIPLES. ASSIGNMENT No.1 - RESISTOR NETWORKS

Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering Technology. EET 3086C Circuit Analysis Laboratory Experiments. Masood Ejaz

Oscilloscope Measurements

LABORATORY 3 v3 CIRCUIT ELEMENTS

EXPERIMENT 5 : THE DIODE

PHASORS AND PHASE SHIFT CIRCUITS

RC Circuit Activity. Retrieve a power cord and a voltage sensor from the wire rack hanging on the wall in the lab room.

SINGLE PHASE CURRENT SOURCE INVERTER (C.S.I)

Federal Urdu University of Arts, Science & Technology Islamabad Pakistan SECOND SEMESTER ELECTRONICS - I

CHAPTER 6. Motor Driver

AC Theory and Electronics

Electronic Circuits I Laboratory 03 Rectifiers

Fundamental of Electrical Engineering Lab Manual

Circuit 4 Schmitt Trigger

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LAB WORK EE301 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS

PHYS 3322 Modern Laboratory Methods I AC R, RC, and RL Circuits

EE 368 Electronics Lab. Experiment 10 Operational Amplifier Applications (2)

Exercise 9: inductor-resistor-capacitor (LRC) circuits

Lab 9 - INTRODUCTION TO AC CURRENTS AND VOLTAGES

EE 210: CIRCUITS AND DEVICES

University of Jordan School of Engineering Electrical Engineering Department. EE 204 Electrical Engineering Lab

Experiment 8 Frequency Response

Measure the roll-off frequency of an acousto-optic modulator

ENGR 1110: Introduction to Engineering Lab 7 Pulse Width Modulation (PWM)

Electronics. RC Filter, DC Supply, and 555

EXPERIMENT 5 : DIODES AND RECTIFICATION

Standing Waves and Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR)

EE 210: CIRCUITS AND DEVICES

Sept 13 Pre-lab due Sept 12; Lab memo due Sept 19 at the START of lab time, 1:10pm

Facility of Engineering. Biomedical Engineering Department. Medical Electronic Lab BME (317) Post-lab Forms

EXPERIMENT 10: SINGLE-TRANSISTOR AMPLIFIERS 11/11/10

INTRODUCTION TO AC FILTERS AND RESONANCE

Group: Names: (1) In this step you will examine the effects of AC coupling of an oscilloscope.

ECE 3155 Experiment I AC Circuits and Bode Plots Rev. lpt jan 2013

EXPERIMENT 1 PRELIMINARY MATERIAL

The Tuned Circuit. Aim of the experiment. Circuit. Equipment and components. Display of a decaying oscillation. Dependence of L, C and R.

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHARLOTTE. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

The Semiconductor Diode

EXPERIMENT 5 : THE DIODE

LABORATORY 3 v1 CIRCUIT ELEMENTS

PhysicsAndMathsTutor.com 1

Experiment 8: An AC Circuit

Lab 11: 555 Timer/Oscillator Circuits

555 Timer/Oscillator Circuits

Waveform Generators and Oscilloscopes. Lab 6

The Oscilloscope. Vision is the art of seeing things invisible. J. Swift ( ) OBJECTIVE To learn to operate a digital oscilloscope.

Transcription:

Name: Partner: Partner: Partner: Purpose: 1) to investigate the electrical properties of a diode; and 2) to use a diode to construct an AC to DC converter. The Diode A diode is an electrical device which acts like a one-way valve. In an ideal diode, current flows with zero resistance in one direction, but can not flow in the opposite direction due to infinite resistance. For the diode shown (along with its symbol) current flowing down encounters zero resistance, while current flowing upward encounters infinite resistance. Thus for an ideal diode the current will be infinite for positive values of V d, and the current will be zero for negative values of V d. In Project 1 you will measure how the current depends on V d for a real diode. Project 1: Current versus Voltage for a Diode Use the Pasco Circuit Board to set up the following circuit. For each value of R you will measure the source voltage V 0 and the current I. It is easiest to measure V 0 first for each R, then go back and measure I for each R. In this way you will only have to switch the multimeter from voltage mode to current mode once. Remember to break the circuit and place the multimeter in series to measure current. Record the values in the table below. After you have measured V 0 and I, calculate the voltage across the diode V d for each R. Make sure you have the diode properly oriented. Look at the previous figure to determine which way the white band goes. Page 1 of 6

R V 0 I V R = IR V d 100 Ω 1 kω 10 kω 100 kω Now repeat the above procedure with the diode reverse biased. In order to do this, turn the diode around. Note, since the diode is turned around, the voltage V d is now negative, so enter the values for V d as negative numbers. Think about what the current should be in this case before you make the measurements. R 100 Ω 1 kω 10 kω 100 kω V 0 I V R = IR V d Using data from your two tables make a graph of I (y-axis) versus V d (x-axis) for the diode. Use the Graphical Analysis program on the computer. Print graphs for each member. Q. How do your data compare to the predictions you would make for an ideal diode? Page 2 of 6

Project 2: Basics of AC to DC conversion The one-way valve characteristic of a diode is the basis of converting alternating current (AC) to direct current (DC). To understand how this works consider the circuit: Vout 2V + - Ra Rb ground Ra represents a diode oriented as shown above. Current from the source will go clockwise through the circuit. Ra 0 since it is the resistance of the forward biased diode. What will be the voltage at Vout with respect to ground? Show your work. Now suppose the voltage source has changed direction so that it tries to drive current counterclockwise. - 2V + V Ra Rb Vout ground The diode is now reverse biased, hence Ra. What will be the value of Vout now? If the voltage source is AC that means it is sinusoidal, so that it alternates between driving current clockwise and counterclockwise. You should now be able to predict what Vout will look like for an AC voltage source, Ra a diode, and Rb a resistor. Page 3 of 6

Now you will construct a simple AC to DC converter using the diode on a Pasco Circuit Board. Step1. Set up the following circuit. Note there is no diode yet. 1. Set the function generator to produce a 2 volt amplitude (4 volts peak to peak) 1000 Hz sine wave. Use the oscilloscope to display this voltage V in on Channel 1 in the upper half of the screen. Note that the oscilloscope voltage probes are 10 probes. This means that the voltage scale on the oscilloscope is one tenth the actual voltage. For example, if you use the 0.1 VOLTS/DIV setting, it is really 1.0 VOLTS/DIV. 2. You should adjust the trigger, position, Volts/ Div, Time/ Div, etc. until you get a stable sine wave. The screen should look similar to this. 3. Display V Out on Channel 2 in the lower half of the screen. (For this circuit V in and V Out are the same. Why? Explain below. ) The screen should look like this. Page 4 of 6

Step 2. Insert a diode to make the following circuit. Note that V in and V Out are no longer attached to the same point of the circuit. Draw graphs of V in and V Out as they appear on the screen. Clearly indicate where zero volts is for each channel. Also indicate the Volts/ Div and Time/ Div. Q. Are these graphs substantially different than in Step 1? If so, explain why. Use your results from Project 1 and think about how the current through the diode depends on the voltage across it. Also remember that the current then goes through the resistor. Step 3. Add a capacitor in parallel with the resistor to make the following circuit.. Page 5 of 6

Draw graphs of V in and V Out. Clearly indicate where zero volts is for each channel. indicate the Volts/ Div and Time/ Div. Also Q. Are these graphs substantially different than in Step 2? the capacitor can charge and discharge in this circuit. If so, explain why. Think about how Homework 1. Compare your I versus V graph for the diode to the I vs. V graph for a 1 kω resistor. Sketch each below making it clear how they differ. 2. Draw a graph for V in and V Out for the AC to DC converter in Step 2 if the diode were turned around. Page 6 of 6