AN1111: Doubling the Output Current to a Load with a Dual
... current will be delivered to the load. The overall gain is still 1 + (R2/R1). Resistors Rbm1 and Rbm2 are back match resistors. When driving a transmission line, Rbm1 and Rbm2 should equal twice the characteristic impedance of the line to terminate it properly since they are driving it in parallel. ...
... current will be delivered to the load. The overall gain is still 1 + (R2/R1). Resistors Rbm1 and Rbm2 are back match resistors. When driving a transmission line, Rbm1 and Rbm2 should equal twice the characteristic impedance of the line to terminate it properly since they are driving it in parallel. ...
Physics 2102 Spring 2002 Lecture 8
... and all batteries and light bulbs are identical, in which arrangements will the light bulbs as bright as the one in circuit X? • Does the answer change if batteries are not ideal? ...
... and all batteries and light bulbs are identical, in which arrangements will the light bulbs as bright as the one in circuit X? • Does the answer change if batteries are not ideal? ...
eet 307 power electronics 2005-2006
... Capacitances Cgs and Cgd, vary with the voltage across them because they are affected by depletion layers within the device. The change in Cgd with drain-to-gate voltage can be as much as a factor of 100 or more. Cgs has only a small voltage change across it compared to Cgd and consequently a small ...
... Capacitances Cgs and Cgd, vary with the voltage across them because they are affected by depletion layers within the device. The change in Cgd with drain-to-gate voltage can be as much as a factor of 100 or more. Cgs has only a small voltage change across it compared to Cgd and consequently a small ...
Circuit Sums with ac
... Circuit Sums with a.c. If the circuit only contains resistances (as well as generators of voltage), the calculations work just like d.c. Fortunately, in the domestic situation, such circuits are, near enough, the norm. Complications arise if the circuit includes Inductance and/or Capacitance, both o ...
... Circuit Sums with a.c. If the circuit only contains resistances (as well as generators of voltage), the calculations work just like d.c. Fortunately, in the domestic situation, such circuits are, near enough, the norm. Complications arise if the circuit includes Inductance and/or Capacitance, both o ...
Electronic_Metronome_revised
... • Time constants of two different resistorcapacitor networks determine the length of time the timer output, t1 and t2, is at 5V and 0V, respectively. ...
... • Time constants of two different resistorcapacitor networks determine the length of time the timer output, t1 and t2, is at 5V and 0V, respectively. ...
Electrical Safety -- and its implications for designing products
... will fluctuate considerably. The graph on the next page shows how the rectified voltage will vary with time. In electronic systems, the usual method of smoothing the voltage is to place a capacitor in parallel with the output. The capacitor acts as a 'reservoir'; it fills up with electric charge whe ...
... will fluctuate considerably. The graph on the next page shows how the rectified voltage will vary with time. In electronic systems, the usual method of smoothing the voltage is to place a capacitor in parallel with the output. The capacitor acts as a 'reservoir'; it fills up with electric charge whe ...
Electronic_Metronome
... • Time constants of two different resistorcapacitor networks determine the length of time the timer output, t1 and t2, is at 5V and 0V, respectively. ...
... • Time constants of two different resistorcapacitor networks determine the length of time the timer output, t1 and t2, is at 5V and 0V, respectively. ...
TRIAC
TRIAC, from triode for alternating current, is a genericized tradename for an electronic component that can conduct current in either direction when it is triggered (turned on), and is formally called a bidirectional triode thyristor or bilateral triode thyristor.TRIACs are a subset of thyristors and are closely related to silicon controlled rectifiers (SCR). However, unlike SCRs, which are unidirectional devices (that is, they can conduct current only in one direction), TRIACs are bidirectional and so allow current in either direction. Another difference from SCRs is that TRIAC current can be enabled by either a positive or negative current applied to its gate electrode, whereas SCRs can be triggered only by positive current into the gate. To create a triggering current, a positive or negative voltage has to be applied to the gate with respect to the MT1 terminal (otherwise known as A1).Once triggered, the device continues to conduct until the current drops below a certain threshold called the holding current.The bidirectionality makes TRIACs very convenient switches for alternating-current (AC) circuits, also allowing them to control very large power flows with milliampere-scale gate currents. In addition, applying a trigger pulse at a controlled phase angle in an AC cycle allows control of the percentage of current that flows through the TRIAC to the load (phase control), which is commonly used, for example, in controlling the speed of low-power induction motors, in dimming lamps, and in controlling AC heating resistors.