RF5388 3.3V, DUAL-BAND FRONT-END MODULE Features
... front-end design and greatly reduces the number of components outside of the core chipset thus minimizing the footprint and assembly cost of the overall 802.11a/b/g/n solution. The RF5388 contains integrated PA's for 2.5GHz and 5GHz, diplexers, TX/RX switch, LNA for the 5.0GHz receive band, matching ...
... front-end design and greatly reduces the number of components outside of the core chipset thus minimizing the footprint and assembly cost of the overall 802.11a/b/g/n solution. The RF5388 contains integrated PA's for 2.5GHz and 5GHz, diplexers, TX/RX switch, LNA for the 5.0GHz receive band, matching ...
Electrical Machines - Questions and Answers
... overload relays with trip contacts so arranged that it will trip if the displacement of one overload element differs from that of the others. This type of relay will operate if single-phasing occurs at or near full load with the same time delay as on overload, but at light loads, the time delay for ...
... overload relays with trip contacts so arranged that it will trip if the displacement of one overload element differs from that of the others. This type of relay will operate if single-phasing occurs at or near full load with the same time delay as on overload, but at light loads, the time delay for ...
Touch (Leakage) Current Test
... (a) Output voltage to input voltage ratio: V3 / V1 (20 Hz - 1 MHz) (b) Meter indication (scale): IIndicated = V3 (peak) / 500 Weighted mA (c) Input voltage per milliampere indication: V1 / Iindicated (mA) ...
... (a) Output voltage to input voltage ratio: V3 / V1 (20 Hz - 1 MHz) (b) Meter indication (scale): IIndicated = V3 (peak) / 500 Weighted mA (c) Input voltage per milliampere indication: V1 / Iindicated (mA) ...
Lecture 8 - Purdue University Cytometry Laboratories
... © 1990-2004 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University BMS 631 – LECTURE007.PPT ...
... © 1990-2004 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University BMS 631 – LECTURE007.PPT ...
PWA_Mod06_Prob01_v07
... vC (0) 100[mV]. This is not a good choice for the first step. We can certainly find the voltage across the resistor. However, it will not help us much, since we would also need to know the voltage across the current source to be able to find vX. To find the voltage across the current source, we ne ...
... vC (0) 100[mV]. This is not a good choice for the first step. We can certainly find the voltage across the resistor. However, it will not help us much, since we would also need to know the voltage across the current source to be able to find vX. To find the voltage across the current source, we ne ...
Power Supply for a Remotely Operated Vehicle
... List of Figures Figure 1: Proposed power supply system ................................................... 1 Figure 2: Function diagram ......................................................................... 3 Figure 3: Intended load for the power supply system .................................. ...
... List of Figures Figure 1: Proposed power supply system ................................................... 1 Figure 2: Function diagram ......................................................................... 3 Figure 3: Intended load for the power supply system .................................. ...
IZT-4S32@120V
... 2.2 VZT-4PSP32-G ballast shall provide Independent Lamp Operation (ILO) allowing remaining lamp(s) to maintain full light output when one or more lamps fail. 2.3 Ballast shall be provided with integral protection circuitry to withstand connection of low voltage control leads to mains power supply. I ...
... 2.2 VZT-4PSP32-G ballast shall provide Independent Lamp Operation (ILO) allowing remaining lamp(s) to maintain full light output when one or more lamps fail. 2.3 Ballast shall be provided with integral protection circuitry to withstand connection of low voltage control leads to mains power supply. I ...
Loop and Nodal Analysis and Op Amps
... http://www.williamson-labs.com/480_xtor.htm http://www.milbert.com/tstxt.htm ...
... http://www.williamson-labs.com/480_xtor.htm http://www.milbert.com/tstxt.htm ...
The First Practical LED Thomas M. Okon and James R. Biard
... In Sept. of 1964, researchers affiliated with the JPL space program investigated the potential use of a film scanner system, which used the SNX-100 LED as a light source and an LS-400 silicon planar photosensor as the light sensor (Fig. 3). A camera-film processor, which had been designed for spacec ...
... In Sept. of 1964, researchers affiliated with the JPL space program investigated the potential use of a film scanner system, which used the SNX-100 LED as a light source and an LS-400 silicon planar photosensor as the light sensor (Fig. 3). A camera-film processor, which had been designed for spacec ...
Resistive opto-isolator
Resistive opto-isolator (RO), also called photoresistive opto-isolator, vactrol (after a genericized trademark introduced by Vactec, Inc. in the 1960s), analog opto-isolator or lamp-coupled photocell, is an optoelectronic device consisting of a source and detector of light, which are optically coupled and electrically isolated from each other. The light source is usually a light-emitting diode (LED), a miniature incandescent lamp, or sometimes a neon lamp, whereas the detector is a semiconductor-based photoresistor made of cadmium selenide (CdSe) or cadmium sulfide (CdS). The source and detector are coupled through a transparent glue or through the air.Electrically, RO is a resistance controlled by the current flowing through the light source. In the dark state, the resistance typically exceeds a few MOhm; when illuminated, it decreases as the inverse of the light intensity. In contrast to the photodiode and phototransistor, the photoresistor can operate in both the AC and DC circuits and have a voltage of several hundred volts across it. The harmonic distortions of the output current by the RO are typically within 0.1% at voltages below 0.5 V.RO is the first and the slowest opto-isolator: its switching time exceeds 1 ms, and for the lamp-based models can reach hundreds of milliseconds. Parasitic capacitance limits the frequency range of the photoresistor by ultrasonic frequencies. Cadmium-based photoresistors exhibit a ""memory effect"": their resistance depends on the illumination history; it also drifts during the illumination and stabilizes within hours, or even weeks for high-sensitivity models. Heating induces irreversible degradation of ROs, whereas cooling to below −25 °C dramatically increases the response time. Therefore, ROs were mostly replaced in the 1970s by the faster and more stable photodiodes and photoresistors. ROs are still used in some sound equipment, guitar amplifiers and analog synthesizers owing to their good electrical isolation, low signal distortion and ease of circuit design.