Download Lecture 6: Binary Counter

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

405-line television system wikipedia , lookup

Opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup

Telecommunications engineering wikipedia , lookup

Molecular scale electronics wikipedia , lookup

Electronics technician (United States Navy) wikipedia , lookup

Index of electronics articles wikipedia , lookup

Printed electronics wikipedia , lookup

Electrical engineering wikipedia , lookup

Electronic engineering wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Lecture 6
Binary Counter
Thinking Digitally
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
1
Henry Farny’s Song of the Talking Wire
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
2
2 Minute Quiz
Name_______ Sec_______Date_______
• Code Example:
• Code Example:
• Code Example:
• PWM Question:
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
3
Joseph Henry & the Telegraph
•
•
•
•
Albany Academy Experiment
Assisted Morse at Princeton
1st Head of Smithsonian
Unit of inductance: Henry
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
4
Morse Code
• Simple sequences of short
and long clicks to represent
letters and numbers
• Easier to generate than
sound
• Easier to distinguish than
sound
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
5
UPC Codes
•Bars come in four
widths 1-2-3-4
•Start is 1-1-1 (blackwhite-black)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
0 = 3-2-1-1
1 = 2-2-2-1
2 = 2-1-2-2
3 = 1-4-1-1
4 = 1-1-3-2
5 = 1-2-3-1
6 = 1-1-1-4
7 = 1-3-1-2
8 = 1-2-1-3
9 = 3-1-1-2
2/18/2004
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The zero is 3-2-1-1 (space-bar-space-bar).
The four is 1-1-3-2 (space-bar-space-bar).
The three is 1-4-1-1 (space-bar-space-bar).
The next three zeros are 3-2-1-1 (space-bar-space-bar).
In the middle there is a standard 1-1-1-1-1 (space-barspace-bar-space), which is important because it means
the numbers on the right are optically inverted!
The one is 2-2-2-1 (bar-space-bar-space).
The stop character is a 1-1-1 (bar-space-bar).
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
6
Computer Number System Examples
From Computer Science I
10110101110001011001110011110110
11
B
5
5
12
C
5
9
5
12
9
B5C59CF6
2/18/2004
C
15
F
6
binary number
equivalent base 10 value for
each group of 4 consecutive
binary digits (bits)
6
corresponding hexadecimal
(base 16) digit
equivalent hexadecimal
number
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
7
Communicating With Pulses
• PCM: Pulse Code Modulation
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
8
PCM: Pulse Code Modulation
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
9
PWM: Pulse Width Modulation
• Signal is compared to a sawtooth wave
producing a pulse width proportional to
amplitude
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
10
Optical Receiver
• Receiver detects pulses of light
• Pulses are amplified and partly averaged by 741 opamp (volume adjusted with the pot)
 Higher frequencies still in signal cannot be heard
• Signal is increased by 386 audio amp
• 386 audio amp drives the speaker
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
11
Optical Transmitter
• Audio signal changes thresholds for 555
timer producing a type of pulse width
modulation of the light from the LED.
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
12
Signals from Audio Remote
54603B, CHAN1, 09:22, 9/20/2002
54603B, CHAN1, 09:23, 9/20/2002
8
8
6
6
4
4
2
2
0
0
20.0 ms/
5.00 ms/
Mostly hear higher frequencies in pulses
3.5 x 20 = 70ms or 14Hz
54603B, CHAN1, 09:24, 9/20/2002
54603B, CHAN1, 09:25, 9/20/2002
8
8
6
6
4
4
2
2
0
0
500 us/
4 x 500 = 2000us or 500Hz
2/18/2004
100 us/
2 x 100 / 9 = 23us or 43kHz
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
13
Binary Numbers
0
1
2
3
4
5
0000
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
6
7
8
9
10
11
0110
0111
1000
1001
1010
1011
Byte
Lower Nibble
Upper Nibble
Bit
7
Bit
6
Bit
5
Bit
4
Bit
3
Bit
2
Bit
1
Bit
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
1
2
128
2/18/2004
7
+
2
+ 0
6
+
+
2
5
+
32 +
2
4
3
+
2
+
16 +
0
+
2
1
2
4
+
+
2
0
=183
2
+
2
Binary
number
+
1
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
=
183
14
Binary Counter
• Animations showing counter operation
http://www.play-hookey.com/digital/synchronous_counter.html
• Counter for lab
1
2
9
10
7
6
5
4
3
CL
CLK
LD
TE
PE
CO
P4
P3
P2
P1
Q4
Q3
Q2
Q1
15
11
12
13
14
14161
2
-
+
1
5V
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
15
Typical Output for Binary Counter
• Note how the Q outputs form 4 bit numbers
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
16
Digital Pulses
• Function generator produces a 1kHz
sinusoidal voltage. 1v peak-to-peak (pp)
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
17
Digital Pulses
• Switch to a square wave at 1kHz. Still
1v pp
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
18
Digital Pulses
• Add a 0.5 volt offset so that the square wave
goes from 0 volts to 1 volt
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
19
Digital Pulses
• Now the duty cycle is adjusted to 20% to see
what a single digital pulse looks like.
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
20
10
10
8
8
6
6
4
4
Pulse Voltage
Pulse Voltage
Pulses on a Transmission Line
2
0
-2
2
0
-2
-4
-4
-6
-6
-8
-10
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Distance Along The Line
0.8
1
From
Matlab
-8
-10
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Distance Along The Line
0.8
1
• Pulses propagate down transmission lines at the
speed of light. They reflect off of the load if the load is
not the same impedance as the line. Lines, sources
and loads must be matched.
• Cable TV lines are 75 ohms. Cables in the lab are
typically 50 ohms.
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
21
What Can Be Done With PWM?
Low
Duty Cycle
Medium
Duty Cycle
High
Duty Cycle
• Question: What happens if voltages like
the ones above are connected to a light
bulb? (4th 2 Minute Quiz Question)
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
22
What Can Be Done With PWM?
• Average power can be controlled
• Average flows can also be controlled by fully
opening and closing a valve with some duty
cycle
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
23
What About Analog Modulation?
• AM: Amplitude
Modulation
• FM: Frequency
Modulation
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
24
Other Coding Applications
• Cryptography
• Image Compression





JPEG (Joint Photographic Expert Group)
GIF (Graphics Interchange Format)
TIFF (Tagged Image File Format)
MPEG (Compression of Motion Video)
Most use Discrete Cosine Transform
method
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
25
Image Compression
2 bpp
0.5 bpp
24 bpp original
(bits per pixel)
Top: JPEG
Bottom: JPEG2K
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
26
2 Minute Quiz
ANSWERS
• Code Example: MORSE, UPC
• Code Example: BINARY
• Code Example: PWM
• PWM Question: The longer the duty cycle, the
longer the light bulb is on and the brighter the
light
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
27
Where Will You See This Material Again?
• 555 Timer – IEE Lab 6
• Digital Counter – IEE Lab 7
• Counters: ECSE- 2610 Computer Components
and Operations, ENGR-2350 Introduction to
Embedded Control
• Signals and Transforms: ECSE-2410 Signals and
Systems
• Pulse Width Modulation: Embedded Control,
ECSE/EPOW-4080 Semiconductor Power
Electronics
• Pulses on Transmission Lines: ECSE-2100
Fields and Waves I
2/18/2004
Introduction to Engineering Electronics
STOLEN FROM K. A. Connor
28