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Transcription:

Experiment Manual

Instruction Manual Contents 4 Introduction 2 Electronics 3 The parts in your kit 6 Tips for assembling the circuits 9 Getting started with light-emitting diodes 0 Red light with green parts 0 2 Wire salad 0 3 Green instead of red 4 Double light 2 5 Morse code 4 6 Alternating red and green 5 7 Current in line 6 8 Salt makes things conductive 6 9 Swap meet 8 0 Polarity tester 8 Improved polarity tester 9 2 Resistance to red 20 3 Resistors in a row 20 4 Resistors in parallel 2 5 All resistors in parallel 22 Making sounds with circuits 24 6 The police are on the way 24 7 Ambulance 24 8 Fire engine 25 9 Changing the sound on the fly 25 20 Sound or light your choice 26 2 Blinking LED 26 Switching the transistors 27 22 The secrets of the transistor 27 23 Quick switch 28 24 Only turning the transistor off 29 25 Sound change by transistor 30 26 Alarm system with light signal 30 27 Alarm with light signal and control 32 28 Alarm on contact 32 29 Alarm system with sound 33 Controlling with light 34 30 Light makes light 34 3 Invisible light 35 32 Police arriving in darkness 36 33 Base in the balance 37 Transistors as amplifiers 39 34 Sensitive amplifier 39 35 Multiplied sensitivity 40 36 Touch button 40 37 Conductivity tester 4 38 Rain sensor with sound 42 39 Alarm! Overflow! 43 40 Low water level alarm 43 4 Sensitive light display 44 42 Night light 44 43 Light barrier 45 44 Super-sensitive light detector 45

45 Light on, sound on 46 46 Light off, sound on 46 Electricity: stored in the smallest of spaces 47 47 Charged with electricity 47 48 One-second electricity supply 48 49 Small charges made visible 48 On stopwatches and timers 49 50 Stairway light 49 5 Stairway light with sound switch 50 52 Timer 50 53 Timer with sound change 5 54 Timer with phototransistor control 5 55 Light-controlled stairway light 52 56 First green, then red 52 Flip-flop: a circuit with a memory 53 57 Alarm system with memory 53 58 Flip-flop with red and green 53 59 Optical alarm system with memory 54 60 Alarm with invisible light 54 Flasher, tapper, buzzer 55 6 Green flasher 55 62 Crackling and purring 56 63 Adjustable sound pitch 57 64 Light-controlled flasher 57 65 Light-controlled noisemaker 58 Logic gates: AND, OR, NOT, in electronic language 59 66 A circuit for addition 59 67 Double sound protection 59 68 OR gate 60 69 A circuit in denial 60 70 AND-NOT gate 6 7 OR-NOT gate 6 72 Smart alarm system 62 73 Double security 62 Science Database Boxes Electrical current and electronics Plus and minus 2 In what direction does current flow? 3 Voltage and current strength 4 Morse code 5 Conductor, nonconductor, semiconductor 7 Light-emitting diodes & Resistors 9 Wiring symbols 2 How electrical valves work 22 The transistor as a switch 29 What s going on inside a transistor? 3 Phototransistor 35 Infrared light 36 Transistor as amplifier 39 Capacitors 47 Frequency & Monuments to the pioneers of electricity 56 5

The parts in your kit Component Qty. Description Appearance Battery box Item No. 704484 The power pack that supplies the electricity for the experiments. Before starting the experiments, you will have to install two.5-volt AA batteries. You can then collect current from the two terminals (+ and -). Never directly connect these terminals to each other. The batteries and wires can heat up and explode, not to mention that the batteries will be quickly used up. Selector switch Item No. 705055 Depending on the setting of the switch, one or another pair of the three contact plugs will be electrically connected. Connector with 4 terminals (X-shaped) Item No. 705050 Straight connector with 2 terminals (I-shaped) Item No. 70505 20 0 For connecting components. The metal plugs of the other components are inserted into the side slits so that they are electrically connected to each other as indicated by the white lines. In the instructions, they are called X-connectors. For the electrical connection of components. The two plugs are electrically connected to each other. In the instructions, they are referred to as I-connectors. Angled connector with 2 terminals (L-shaped) Item No. 705052 5 For the electrical connection of components, but in a way that guides the current at a right angle. Looks like an L, hence referred to as an L-connector in the instructions. Connector with 3 terminals (T-shaped) Item No. 705053 2 For electrical connections. The three plugs are electrically connected to each other as indicated by the white lines. In the instructions, they are referred to as T-connectors, because their shape is similar to a T. Red light-emitting diode Item No. 70880 It emits a red light when current is flowing through it. 6

Component Qty. Description Appearance Green light-emitting diode Item No. 708802 It lights up green when current flows through it. Transistor (npn) Item No. 708800 Phototransistor Item No. 708803 2 The transistor is a fundamental electronic building block. It is hidden inside of electronic devices or computer chips, sometimes by the thousands. It serves as an amplifier or electric switch, and will play an important role in your experiments. It has three terminals it s important not to mix up the different terminals! This component reacts to light: It lets electric current pass through more or less easily, depending on illumination. Sound- Generator (IC) Item No. 708804 This red-orange-colored building block produces various kinds of noises, because it has dozens of transistors inside its housing that work together in a complicated manner. Speaker Item No. 708805 It turns signals from the sound generator and a few other things into sounds you can hear. Resistor, kilohm ( kω) Item No. 708806 Resistors allow you to regulate the flow of current. They come in various electrical values, indicated in kilohms (kω). Careful, always insert the resistor with the indicated value! Resistor, 8.2 kilohms (8.2 kω) Item No. 708807 This is just like the -kilohm resistor, except this one offers 8.2 times the resistance to the current. 7

The parts in your kit Component Qty. Description Appearance Resistor, 22 kilohms (22 kω) Item No. 708808 This is just like the -kilohm resistor, except this one offers 22 times the resistance to the current. Resistor, 20 kilohms (20 kω) Item No. 708809 The same applies as with the -kilohm resistor, except this one offers 20 times the resistance to the current. Electrolytic capacitor, 00 microfarads (00 μf) Item No. 70880 Capacitors have important tasks to perform in circuits. They possess various electrical values, indicated in microfarads (μf). Install capacitors only as shown in the circuit diagrams. Pay attention to the correct value and the + sign, or they might get damaged. Capacitor, 0. microfarad (0. μf) Item No. 70882 Red connecting wire with plugs Item No. 706428 Blue connecting wire with plugs Item No. 706429 Divider Item No. 706078 Here, everything is just like with the 00-microfarad capacitor, except this one has a much lower microfarad value. It makes no difference how you insert this one. For connecting electronic parts. At the ends, there are contacts that fit into the green wire connectors. Referred to in brief as red wire. Like the red connecting wire with plugs, but in a different color. In the instructions, it is referred to in brief as blue wire. You can use this tool to pry the inserted components or connectors apart without bending the plugs. Slide it between the components and push the components apart. Additionally required household items These are listed in italic (slanted) letters in the You will need sections. metal paper clips tape all-purpose glue aluminum foil scissors cardboard w h i t e paper plastic ruler very soft pencil cloth piece of plastic wrap table salt drinking glass teaspoon paper towel tube deionized water tap water thin wire flashlight TV remote digital camera 8

3 Green instead of red You performed the previous experiments with the red LED. Now it s the green LED s turn to shine. Battery box 4 X-connectors I-connector Selector switch Green LED Assemble the same circuit as in Experiment, except this time use the green LED. Its green light will shine as soon as you push the switch. Science Database Atomic nucleus Electrical l current and electronics Electrons For a long time, researchers have puzzled over the nature of electrical current. It is invisible, with only its effects being noticeable. Today, we know that it is a flow of electrons. Electrons are smaller and more mobile than atoms, and they have lots of unusual properties. Normally, electrons are firmly attached to the atom they belong to. But sometimes, especially in metals, electrons can get free and zoom around among the atoms. You can picture electrons in a wire like water in a pipe. Electrons Direction of flow When water is set in motion by a pump, it starts to flow through the pipe. This flow can be used to drive a small water wheel, for example. Pump The green LED works just like the red one, except the light-emitting material has been changed so that it produces green light. Water wheel With electricity, too, there are things like pumps (for example, batteries) that set the electron cloud in the wire in motion. This is called electrical current. You can use electrons to do lots of amazing things. The technology of controlling electrons toward certain goals is called electronics. With the help of transistors, capacitors, resistors, and LEDs, we can make electrons do what we want them to.

39 Alarm! Overflow! In factories, there are often automatic filling systems for tanks. So they need an electronic means to determine when a tank is full and to switch off the pump. And in the basement of a house, it s useful to have an automatic monitoring system to sound an alarm when rainwater gets in. A water level sensor can handle tasks like those. Circuit from Experiment 38 Tape Drinking glass Tap water. Tape the free ends of the wires to the rim of an empty glass. The plugs should hang about 2 cm below the rim, and there should be a few centimeters of space between them. 2. Switch on the circuit and slowly pour water into the glass. As soon as the water reaches the two plugs, the LED will light up and the alarm will sound. 40 Low water level alarm Circuits like this one warn you when a liquid level is too low, such as the gasoline level in a car s gas tank. Battery box 0 X-connectors 2 I-connectors 2 L-connector 2 Transistors Red LED Selector switch Red wire Blue wire 20 kω Resistor Drinking glass Tape Teaspoon Tap water. Assemble the circuit and secure the free wire ends to the inside of the glass. Switch on; the LED shines. 2. Fill the glass with tap water until both plugs are submerged. The LED will go out. 3. Now take water out with the teaspoon. At the moment that the water no longer creates a connection between the plugs, the LED will turn on. T2 T The water makes a connection between the plugs when it reaches them and the circuit responds. As long as the water creates a connection between the plugs, the first transistor s base is connected to the positive battery terminal, so its C-E section is conductive. That means that the second transistor s base is connected to its emitter and the negative terminal, and the current is blocked in spite of the connection with the positive terminal via the 20-kΩ resistor: The LED remains dark. If the water level drops, the first transistor s C-E section cuts off, and the base connection via the 20-kΩ resistor ensures that the second transistor is conductive. Then the LED lights up. 43

63 Adjustable sound pitch It can be a little bit tedious to reinsert resistors. You can use the selector switch to choose between two tone pitches. Battery box 20 X-connectors 7 I-connectors 3 L-connector 2 Transistors 20 kω Resistor 22 kω Resistor 8.2 kω Resistor 00-μF capacitor 0.-μF capacitor Speaker Green LED Selector switch Blue wire Red wire. After assembly, you will hear a tone in the speaker. 2. Push the selector switch to the other setting: The sound changes. 64 Light-controlled flasher In addition to the fixed-value resistors, you also have the phototransistor. With its help, you can use changes in external lighting conditions to adjust the flash tempo. Battery box 7 X-connectors 6 I-connectors 2 L-connector 2 Transistors Phototransistor all the resistors 00-μF capacitor 0.-μF capacitor Red LED Green LED Selector switch Blue wire Red wire. Insert the phototransistor into the blinker circuit from Experiment 6 in place of the resistor mounted on the left. 2. Shade the phototransistor or expose it to bright light and observe how the blink frequency changes. 3. Also try inserting different resis- tors on the right, and compare the results. 4. Swap the capacitors and check what happens. The darker the phototransistor, the higher its resistance value. That causes the blink frequency to drop as it gets less light. When you slide the selector switch, it connects the 22-kΩ resistor in series with the 8.2-kΩ resistor, which changes the left capacitor-resistor istor combination and, thus, the sound as well. 57