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Electronics © by DR. M. Amer Course Contents • • • • • • Introduction Fundamentals of Semiconductor Devices P-N Junction Diodes Bipolar Junction and FET Structures Semiconductor Devices(circuit element, filter, power supply, rectification amplifier) Introduction to digital circuits. 5/23/2017 Introduction electronics fundamentals 5/23/2017 Scientific and Engineering Notation Very large and very small numbers are represented with scientific and engineering notation. 47,000,000 = 4.7 x 107 (Scientific Notation) = 47 x 106 (Engineering Notation) Scientific and Engineering Notation 0.000 027 = 2.7 x 10-5 (Scientific Notation) = 27 x 10-6 (Engineering Notation) 0.605 = 6.05 x 10-1 (Scientific Notation) = 605 x 10-3 (Engineering Notation) SI Fundamental Units Quantity Unit Length Mass Time Electric current Temperature Meter Kilogram Second Ampere Kelvin Symbol m kg s A K Some Important Electrical Units Except for current, all electrical and magnetic units are derived from the fundamental units. Current is a fundamental unit. Quantity Current Charge Voltage Resistance Power Unit Ampere Coulomb Volt Ohm Watt Symbol A C V W W These derived units are based on fundamental units from the meterkilogram-second system, hence are called mks units. Engineering Metric Prefixes Can you name the prefixes and their meaning? P peta 1015 T tera 1012 G giga 109 M mega 106 k kilo 103 Engineering Metric Prefixes Can you name the prefixes and their meaning? m milli 10-3 m micro 10-6 n nano 10-9 p pico 10-12 f femto 10-15 Metric Conversions When converting from a larger unit to a smaller unit, move the decimal point to the right. Remember, a smaller unit means the number must be larger. Smaller unit 0.47 MW = 470 kW Larger number Metric Conversions When converting from a smaller unit to a larger unit, move the decimal point to the left. Remember, a larger unit means the number must be smaller. Larger unit 10,000 pF = 0.01 mF Smaller number Metric Arithmetic When adding or subtracting numbers with a metric prefix, convert them to the same prefix first. 10,000 W + 22 kW = 10,000 W + 22,000 W = 32,000 W Alternatively, 10 kW + 22 kW = 32 kW Metric Arithmetic When adding or subtracting numbers with a metric prefix, convert them to the same prefix first. 200 mA + 1.0 mA = 200 mA + 1,000 mA = 1,200 mA Alternatively, 0.200 mA + 1.0 mA = 1.2 mA Review of V, I, and R Voltage is the amount of energy per charge available to move electrons from one point to another in a circuit and is measured in volts. the rate of charge flow and is measured in Current is amperes. Resistance is in ohms. the opposition to current and is measured Ohm’s law The most important fundamental law in electronics is Ohm’s law, which relates voltage, current, and resistance. Georg Simon Ohm (1787-1854) formulated the equation that bears his name: V I R What is the current in a circuit with a 12 V source if the resistance is 10 W? 1.2 A Ohm’s law If you need to solve for voltage, Ohm’s law is: V IR What is the voltage across a 680 W resistor if the current is 26.5 mA? 18 V Ohm’s law V If you need to solve for resistance, Ohm’s law is: R I What is the (hot) resistance of the bulb? 132 W OFF V Hz 115 V V mV A Range Autorange Touc h/Hold 1s 1s 10 A V 40 mA COM Fused Application of Ohm’s law The resistor is green-blue brown-gold. What should the ammeter read? Power Supply V A +15 V Gnd 5 V 2A - + - + 26.8 mA + m DC Am eter - Energy and Power In electrical work, the rate energy is dissipated can be determined from any of three forms of the power formula. P I 2R P VI V2 P R Together, the three forms are called Watt’s law. Energy and Power What power is dissipated in a 27 W resistor if the current is 0.135 A? Given that you know the resistance and current, substitute the values into P =I 2R. P I 2R (0.135 A) 2 27 W 0.49 W Energy and Power What power is dissipated by a heater that draws 12 A of current from a 120 V supply? The most direct solution is to substitute into P = IV. P IV 12 A 120 V 1440 W Energy and Power What power is dissipated in a 100 W resistor with 5 V across it? V2 The most direct solution is to substitute into P . R It is useful to keep in mind that small resistors operating in low voltage systems need to be sized for the anticipated power. Ampere-hour Rating of Batteries Expected battery life of batteries is given as the amperehours specification. Various factors affect this, so it is an approximation. (Factors include rate of current withdrawal, age of battery, temperature, etc.) How many hours can you expect to have a battery deliver 0.5 A if it is rated at 10 Ah? 20 h Battery Passive Components Resistors Capacitors Inductors Diodes Interface components 25 Electronics 2 Resistors Values specified in ohms (Ω), kilo-ohms (K), or mega-ohms (M) Marked with value using a code 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 5% 10% 26 Electronics 2 Resistor Color Code Or how to read those little resistors! Resistor Color Code 1st band color gives 1st number 2nd band color gives 2nd number 3rd band color gives # of zeros 4th band color gives tolerance or ± How to read it - Resistors are color coded for easy reading. - To determine the value of a given resistor look for the gold or silver tolerance band and hold the resistor with this band to the right. Then read the colored bands left to right. How to read it - Look at the 1st color band and determine its color. This maybe difficult on small or oddly colored resistors. Now look at the chart and match the "1st & 2nd color band" color to the "Digit it represents". Write this number down. How to read it - Now look at the 2nd color band and match that color to the same chart. Write this number next to the 1st Digit. - Match the 3rd color band with the chart under multiplier. This is the number you will multiple the other 2 numbers by. Write it next to the other 2 numbers with a multiplication sign before it. How to read it Example: First color is red which is 2 Second color is black which is 0 Third color is yellow which is 10,000 Tolerance is silver which is 10% Therefore the equation is: 2 0 x 10,000 = 200,000 Ohms ± 10% Resistor Color Code Chart 1st. & 2nd Color Band Digit it Represents -----Multiplier----BLACK 0 X1 BROWN 1 X10 RED 2 X100 ORANGE 3 X1,000 or 1K YELLOW 4 X10,000 or 10K GREEN 5 X100,000 or 100K BLUE 6 X1,000,000 or 1M VIOLET 7 Silver is divide by 100 GRAY 8 Gold is divide by 10 WHITE 9 Tolerances Gold= 5% Silver=10% None=20% K or M? - Many resistors have large amounts of resistance, so we use prefixes to have a handy short name - “k” is for kilo and means 1000 times - “M” is for mega and means 1,000,000 times (million) Practice If you have an Orange Orange Brown Gold resistor What is it’s resistance? The first orange means 3 The second orange means 3 The brown means 1 zero The gold means ± 5% So answer is 330 ohms ± 5% Capacitors Values specified in microfarads (μF) or picofarads (pF) Marked with actual value or a numeric code Some varieties are +/- polarized 36 Capacitor types Ceramic disk Monolithic ceramic Dipped siver-mica Mylar Mylar Ceramic disk Monolithic ceramic Dipped silvered-mica Mylar or polyester Aluminum electrolytic (+/-) Tantalum (+/-) Solid tantalum, polarized 37 Radial aluminum electrolytic Axial aluminum electrolytic Inductors Values specified in henries (H), millihenries (mH) and microhenries (μH) A coil of wire that may be wound on a core of air or other non-magnetic material, or on a magnetic core such as iron powder or ferrite. Two coils magnetically coupled form a transformer. 38 Inductor types Molded inductor & air-wound inductor Ferrite core toroidal transformer 39 Adjustable air-wound inductor Air wound inductor Iron powder toroidal inductor Interface components Switches Plugs Sockets Panel controls 40 LSU 06/04/2007 Two common plug styles Sleeve Ring Tip 1/8” stereo phone plug 1/8” mono phone plug Shield RCA plug Sleeve LSU 06/04/2007 Tip Electronics 2 41 Tip What Is a Semiconductor? •Many materials, such as most metals, allow electrical current to flow through them •These are known as conductors •Materials that do not allow electrical current to flow through them are called insulators •Pure silicon, the base material of most transistors, is considered a semiconductor because its conductivity can be modulated by the introduction of impurities Semiconductors A material whose properties are such that it is not quite a conductor, not quite an insulator Some common semiconductors elemental Si - Silicon (most common) Ge - Germanium Insulators, Semiconductors, and Metals This separation of the conduction bands determines the electrical properties of the material Insulators have a large energy gap – electrons can’t jump to conduction bands – no current flows Conductors (metals) have a very small (or nonexistent) energy gap – electrons easily jump to conduction bands due to thermal excitation – current flows easily Semiconductors have a moderate energy gap – only a few electrons can jump to the conduction band » leaving “holes” – only a little current can flow