* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download ECE 1250 Lab 2
History of electric power transmission wikipedia , lookup
Electrical ballast wikipedia , lookup
Electrical substation wikipedia , lookup
Switched-mode power supply wikipedia , lookup
Power MOSFET wikipedia , lookup
Voltage optimisation wikipedia , lookup
Rectiverter wikipedia , lookup
Current source wikipedia , lookup
Resistive opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
Stray voltage wikipedia , lookup
Surge protector wikipedia , lookup
Buck converter wikipedia , lookup
Alternating current wikipedia , lookup
ECE 3300 Lab 2 ECE 1250 Lab 2 Measuring Voltage, Current & Resistance Building: Resistive Networks, V and I Dividers Design and Build a Resistance Indicator Overview: In Lab 2 you will: Measure voltage and infer current from voltage measurements. Calculate, Simulate, Build, Test (and compare these) for o Serial/Parallel resistive network o voltage divider o current dividers. Design and build a resistance indicator (a light that will go on/off depending on the resistance). This lab will build on Lab 1 by using the series potentiometers as the variable resistance for your resistance indicator. This lab will help you on future labs, because we will later use the resistance indicator circuit in a different way, as a voltage indicator for our variable voltage source. This lab will also help you think through some beginning debug skills. (Check out the 'Sherlock Ohms' Extra Credit.) Equipment List: MyDAQ board with cables. (You can hook them to the lab computers if you don’t want to bring your laptop.) Multisim software. From Lab 1: o Protoboard & wire kit o Potentiometers (10k and 100 Ω) o Resistor (1k ,4.7kΩ) Additional parts: o 1N4728A Zener Diode1 o Red LED o Resistors: 510, 1.5k, 2k ,3.3k, 10kΩ Safety Precautions: 1) Blown Fuse: If you use the MyDAQ as an ammeter (as you are told to do in the lab manual) and accidentally try to read the current across a short circuit (which is a very easy mistake to make), you will blow out the fuse in your MyDAQ. A better way to measure current (to prevent this problem) is to measure voltage across a shunt resistor and calculate the current using Ohm’s Law. Please do it this way in our labs, it will save you and the TAs a lot of grief: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6Fv79uVrcw 2) Short Circuiting the Power Supply: When you are using the power supplies on the MyDAQ, you will have several wires screwed to the black holder on the side of the 1 1N4728A Zener Diode Data Sheet https://www.fairchildsemi.com/ds/1N/1N4749A.pdf 1 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 MyDAQ, all hanging loose together. If their ends touch, they will short circuit. If you short circuit the power (+/- 15V or 5V) together or to ground, you will blow the fuse in the MyDAQ. Take care to prevent this. Keep your bench and wiring neat, always hook the power and ground to the same points on your circuit board, always use the same colors so you recognize them (red, black, white are typically used), etc. 3) If you do blow a fuse: Instructions for changing it are on the class website under Labs, and the ECE stockroom has them in stock. 4) General Electrical Care: It is pretty hard to actually hurt yourself with this equipment and circuits. Throughout our labs, it is possible you may miswire something and create a short circuit, which can make parts get hot, or even pop. We call this ‘letting the magic smoke out of the box’, after which these parts don’t work any more, and you can get new ones in the stockroom. If you smell something hot, ok, unplug your circuit and try to figure it out. Try to be aware and prevent short circuits. For instance, it isn’t really a great idea to probe around in your circuit with a metal screwdriver, which can easily create short circuits. Mistakes happen, and the MyDAQ has a fuse, which should protect it from any circuit mistakes you might make in this class. 5) A few hints I’ve used for wiring circuits: Keep your circuits neat. Label the nodes on your diagram, and keep track of where they are on your board (label them with tape, if necessary). Don’t hook up the power until you are ready to use it. Measure your voltage before you hook it up. Disconnect between circuit revisions. Build your circuit in stages, testing as you go. Measure your resistors before you put them on the board (colors can be easy to mistake). Instructions & Reference Material: MyDAQ as voltmeter https://utah.instructure.com/courses/266578/assignments/1347122 MyDAQ measuring current through shunt resistor http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6Fv79uVrcw MyDAQ measuring resistance http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nE6123mquhI Multisim demos : See DVD in back of your book. Data Sheets: Light Emitting Diodes (LED) http://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/diode/diode_8 Zener Diodes http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zener_diode LED Specs (abbreviated) https://www.sparkfun.com/products/9590 Prelab: Install the MyDAQ on your computer 1. If you haven’t already, get the MyDAQ and Multisim running on your computer. 2. Review the videos and written material (see videos on website). 3. (Optional) You will be faster if you do the circuit calculations and Multisim simulations before you come to lab. If you do not have Multisim running on your PC yet, then just do the calculations, and do the Multisim on the lab computers. 2 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 WRITEUP: Notes taken during the videos and information from written information so you don’t have to go back and watch or review them again. Make sure to label each section the same as highlighted below as you write the information mentioned for each writeup section. Experiment 1: Measure Resistance (10 points) The MyDAQ puts out two voltages (+15V and – 15V relative to the ground, which is labelled AGND. We often need voltages other than these, so are going to build a circuit that provides them. Find the +15V, -15V, and AGND pins on the long side of the MyDAQ, and screw wires in to them. Be careful their ends do not touch each other and short out. 1. Use the MyDAQ as a Voltmeter to measure the voltages to see how close they are to what you are expecting. You may need to use alligator clips to connect the wires on the voltage pins to the Voltmeter probes on the bottom side of the MyDAQ. WRITEUP: Explain your procedure. Note in your notebook and abnormalities or unexpected information that happens. Explain why if you can. Make sure to record the following information in your notebook: +15V to AGND = _________________ ** This is the configuration we will use the rest of this lab. -15V to AGND = _________________ +15V to -15V = _________________ Experiment 2: Resistive Networks, Voltage & Current Dividers (30 points) Calculate, Simulate, Build and Test the circuit for problem m2.3 on page 93 of your text. a) Calculate the total resistance using the methods in section 2-3.1 of your text. b) Calculate the voltages using voltage dividers, described on page 55 of your textbook. c) Calculate the currents using current dividers, described on page 57 of your textbook. Figure 1 Circuit for problem m2.3, page 93 of the Ulaby textbook. 3 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 WRITEUP: Explain your procedure so far in your own words. Print out the solution for the circuit above or rewrite the solution and make sure it is attached securely in your notebook. Make a table similar to the one below and record the following information in your notebook: Value Total Resistance across V1 voltage across R1 voltage across R2 voltage across R4 voltage across R6 Calculated Simulated (Multisim)2 Measured U1= U2= U3= U4= Extra Credit (20 points): Sherlock Ohms Debugs a Circuit Have another student or the TA change any one of your resistors for another resistor with the WRONG value. Using your MyDAQ as a voltmeter, find which resistor it is, and determine if the resistance value is too large or too small. Record information in your lab notebook and make a copy of it or scan it to turn in: (a) Indicate which resistor was changed on Figure 1, (b) describe how you tested, and the (c) reasoning behind your testing method, and (d) anything you found that complicated your testing. WRITEUP: Record all of the information above in your lab notebook and either scan or make a copy of it to receive the extra credit. Experiment 3: Resistance Indicator (50 points) Now let’s build a resistance indicator to turn on a light when the resistance is below a certain value. We will use a Light Emitting Diode LED13 as the light, a Zener Diode D14 to control the turn on voltage, and a resistor R1, that we want to sense. V1 is the +15V source from the MyDAQ. 2 Multisim files are available for download from the lab site, or you can create your own. Light Emitting Diodes (LED) http://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/diode/diode_8 4 Zener Diodes http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zener_diode 3 4 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 Figure 2: Voltage Indicator with a Zener Diode A. Design 1. Determine VF (Voltage across the LED) Figure 3 shows the LED I-V curves. LEDs are fully ON at approximately Ion = 20mA (this is also the maximum recommended current)5, and OFF at approximately Ioff= 5 mA, as shown. At what voltage is a red LED ON? VF = _______________6 Figure 3 Light Emitting Diode (LED) I-V curves 2. Determine VZ (Voltage across the Zener Diode) A Zener diode can act like a voltage-controlled switch, which is how we will use it in this application. If the voltage across the Zener is above VD, current can flow (switch is 5 6 LED Specs (abbreviated) https://www.sparkfun.com/products/9590 Answer: VL = Approximately 1.8V 5 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 ON). If not, no current will flow (switch is OFF). Each Zener has a different Vz, as shown in Figure 4. For the 1N4728A, circle the typical value of Vz = ________________7 Figure 4 Electrical characteristics of Zener Diodes. From [4]. 3. Find VR (voltage across the resistor) From Figure 2, find VR = __________________. Fill in the voltages in Figure 2, and label the current I = 20 mA (ON) and 5 mA (OFF) in the circuit. WRITEUP: Explain your procedure so far in your own words. Make sure to record the values for 𝑉𝐹 , 𝑉𝑍 , and 𝑉𝑅 that you find. Either redraw or print,cut, and paste Figure 2 in your notebook and label the I =20mA(on) and 5mA(off) on the circuit. 4. Find Ron and Roff What resistance is needed in this circuit to turn the LED on and off? Ron = _________________ Standard Value8 = __________________ Roff = _________________ Standard Value = __________________ OR you could use a potentiometer in series with Ron. Redraw Figure 2 so that Ron and a series potentiometer can create Roff, indicating the potentiometer connection. What size pot do you need in order to meet (or exceed) Ron? Potentiometer > _______________________ Could you use the two potentiometers in series from Lab 1? _____________ WRITEUP: Explain what you have done for this step. Make sure your notebook has the redrawn figure 2 along with the answers to above questions, the areas marked for answers, and values for the potentiometer. Again, make sure to note any observations, problems, and how they were overcome. 7 8 Answer: Vz = Approximately 3.3V StandardResistor Values http://ecee.colorado.edu/~mcclurel/resistorsandcaps.pdf 6 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 5. What could go wrong in this circuit (and check to make sure it won’t)? Several potential problems occur when you build a theoretical circuit in real life. These gremlins include (but unfortunately are not limited to): a) Exceeding the current or voltage limits of the components. What would happen if you used ONLY a potentiometer for R?9 Calculate the power through the resistor, and be sure you will not exceed the 1/4W power rating in any configuration (on,off): b) Exceeding the power rating of the MyDAQ. Look up the maximum current that can be sourced by the +/-15V and 5V power supplies on the MyDAQ. Will you be exceeding that rating? c) Components not being exactly as designed. What is the expected range of VZ and R? Approximately how much will this affect your circuit? WRITEUP: Answer all above questions for this section. Write it as complete sentences or rewrite the question and provide the answer. Experiment 4: Simulate the circuit with Multisim10 Simulate your circuit with your values of Ron and Roff. I have given you an approximate circuit below. Use Multisim to evaluate the current (U1) and voltages (U2U4) as shown.11 Compare the ON and OFF cases, and experiment with the value of the resistor. The LED will NOT actually turn OFF, because Multisim allows ‘dim’ LEDs to continue to show as being ON in the simulation. Simulated values are given. Write your calculated / expected values next to the currents, resistances, and voltages in Figure 5: Calculated Values Simulated Values Measured Values 9 Consider your calculations in section 4. What would happen in the circuit if the pot was adjusted to its lowest (R=0) value? 10 Multisim files are available for download from the lab site, or you can create your own. 11 Find parts in multisim from’Select All Groups’ and typing the various component names. U1 is an ammeter. U2,U3,U4 are voltmeters. Note their connection for measuring voltage differences across components. D1 is a Zener (diode), just type Zener. LED1 is an LED, choose a red one.V1 is DC_POWER, and you can change its voltage once you have it set down. Don’t forget the GROUND. 7 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 (a) ON Figure 5: Voltage Indicator (TOP) ON (BOTTOM) OFF (or dim) B. Build and test the circuit. Black Line on Zener At top Flat side / short leg of LED Figure 6 Build the Resistance indicator. This one is shown with a simple Ron resistor, although you may prefer to use your potentiometers in series with Ron instead. Write in the measured resistances and voltages.12 Check your Ron resistance and be sure the light comes on, and an Roff resistance, and show that it is off. Then, you may want to put your pots in series with Ron, to see what range of resistances actually turns your light on and off. WARNING: Do NOT use just the pots, because if you turn them down to R=0, you have effectively short circuited your power supply, and then you will need a new fuse …. 12 A close-up of this figure is available on the lab page. 8 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu ECE 3300 LAB 2 Record your results: Indicate your measured values in Figure 6. Compare them to the expected values in Figure 5. At what range of resistances is your light ON? Ron min = Ron max = WRITEUP: Make sure you describe what you did for this section in your notebook. Record all information as mentioned above in your notebook. Discussion and Conclusions: How to Debug a Circuit (10 points) WRITEUP: You have now calculated, simulated, built a few simple circuits. You have measured resistance, voltage, and (using voltage and ohms law) current. 1) List what you have found to be ‘best practices’ for building circuits. 2) Whether or not you actually made wiring mistakes as you built these circuits, list at least three different ways you could figure out what is wrong in a circuit. 9 UNIVERSITY OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING 50 S. Central Campus Dr | Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9206 | Phone: (801) 581-6941 | Fax: (801) 581-5281 | www.ece.utah.edu