Chapter 5 Lecture 10 Spring 2015. Nonlinear Elements 1. A nonlinear resistance 2. A nonlinear reactance 3. A time varying element in you circuit or system.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Alternating Current and Voltage
Advertisements

Chapter 9 Capacitors.
Chapter 1 Problems ECET 214 Prof. Park NJIT.
Electric current DC Circuits AC Circuits. Lecture questions Electric current DC Circuits. Ohm's law Resistance and conductance Conductivity of electrolytes.
CHAPTER 3 MICROWAVE ‘O’ TYPE TUBES
CHAPTER 4 HELIX TRAVELING-WAVE TUBES(TWT’S)
ECEN5341/4341Bioelectromagnetics Spring 2015 Frank S. Barnes Contact Info: (303) ECOT 250
Electrical Techniques MSN506 notes. Electrical characterization Electronic properties of materials are closely related to the structure of the material.
1 Chapter 5 Sensors and Detectors A detector is typically the first stage of a communication system. Noise in this stage may have significant effects on.
Fiber-Optic Communications
Cellular Neuroscience (207) Ian Parker Lecture # 2 - Passive electrical properties of membranes (What does all this electronics stuff mean for a neuron?)
ECEN 5341/4341 Lecture 9 Chapter 5. Maxwell’s Equations Basic Equations The polarization p couples the fields to the materials The dielectric constant.
Copyright by UNIT III DC Choppers 4/17/2017 Copyright by
Electromagnetic Radiation & Electricity RTEC 111.
Instrumentation & Power Electronics
Lec. (4) Chapter (2) AC- circuits Capacitors and transient current 1.
Recall-Lecture 5 DC Analysis Representation of diode into three models
Chapter Two: Radio-Frequency Circuits. Introduction There is a need to modulate a signal using an information signal This signal is referred to as a baseband.
DC Analysis Representation of diode into three models Ideal case – model 1 with V  = 0 Piecewise linear model 2 with V  has a given value Piecewise linear.
Chapter 22 Alternating-Current Circuits and Machines.
Alternating-Current Circuits Chapter 22. Section 22.2 AC Circuit Notation.
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Electrical Quantities and Basic Circuits
Alternating Current Circuits
Lecture 2 Most basic facts from Electricity needed for understanding telecommunications Local transmission lines in the telephone system Decibels Signals.
3/26/2003BAE of 10 Application of photodiodes A brief overview.
Electrical Energy & Current. Introduction to Electric PE, Electric Potential, and Potential Difference Intro to Electric Potential.
Conventional Tubes Conventional Device tubes cannot be used for frequencies above 100MHz 1. Interelectrode capacitance 2. Lead Inductance effect 3. Transit.
ECE 590 Microwave Transmission for Telecommunications Noise and Distortion in Microwave Systems March 18, 25, 2004.
Chapter 13 Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9 th ed. Floyd © 2010 Pearson Higher Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All Rights.
Avalanche Transit Time Devices
Chapter 23 Alternating Current Circuits Capacitors and Capacitive Reactance The resistance in a purely resistive circuit has the same value at all.
ECEN 5341/4341 Lecture 15 Feb 17, Noise Sources 2. Minimal levels of signal detection. 3. Some characteristic s of Neurons. An Important Reference.
Lumped versus Distributed: A component must be considered as distributed when the physical dimensions of an element become significant with respect to.
TRANSISTOR TUNED AMPLIFIERS. Inroduction  Sometimes it is desired that an amplifier should amplify either a single frequency or a narrow band of frequencies.
Electric Current AP Physics C Montwood High School R.Casao.
Chapter 13 Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9 th ed. Floyd © 2010 Pearson Higher Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All Rights.
Inductance and AC Circuits. Mutual Inductance Self-Inductance Energy Stored in a Magnetic Field LR Circuits LC Circuits and Electromagnetic Oscillations.
ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS A SYSTEMS APPROACH CHAPTER Copyright © 2014 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Electronic Communications: A Systems.
5 장 Dielectrics and Insulators. Preface ‘ Ceramic dielectrics and insulators ’ is a wide-ranging and complex topic embracing many types of ceramic, physical.
Title Light Detectors. Characteristics  Sensitivity  Accuracy  Spectral Relative Response(R( ))  Absolute Sensitivity(S( ))  Signal-to-noise ratio.
Norhayati Soin 06 KEEE 4426 WEEK 3/2 20/01/2006 KEEE 4426 VLSI WEEK 4 CHAPTER 1 MOS Capacitors (PART 3) CHAPTER MOS Capacitance.
DC Analysis Representation of diode into three models Ideal case – model 1 with V  = 0 Piecewise linear model 2 with V  has a given value Piecewise linear.
MR Spectroscopy is a technique for displaying metabolic information from an image. It relies on the inherent differences in resonant frequency or the chemical.
CHAPTER 1 Part 2.1  Noise.
OSCILLATORS Dr.S.SUJA Associate Professor
Halliday/Resnick/Walker Fundamentals of Physics 8th edition
1 Noise Analysis Electrical Noise Electrical noise is defined as any undesirable electrical energy. Figure 57 shows the effect of noise on an electrical.
Chapter 9 CAPACITOR.
Chapters 17 through 23 Midterm Review. Midterm Exam ~ 1 hr, in class 15 questions 6 calculation questions One from each chapter with Ch. 17 and 18 combine.
 The differentiator or differentiating amplifier is as shown in figure.  This circuit will perform the mathematical operation of differentiation.
EKT 451 CHAPTER 6 Sensor & Transducers.
Chapter 5 Lecture 13 February 10, Biological Amplifiers 1 A few molecules can trigger the release of 10,000 Ca ++ ions. 2. A small voltage can open.
FUNCTION GENERATOR.
Chapter 23 Electric Circuits Neurons connected together to form the electrical circuitry in the brain.
Alternating Current Circuits
Application of photodiodes
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
An Important Reference
by: Mrs. Aboli N. Moharil Assistant Professor, EXTC dept.
PIN DIODE.
POWER AMPLIFIERS.
Lecture 11 Chapter 5 February 9, 2018.
Amplifiers Classes Electronics-II
Amplifiers Classes Electronics-II
Alternating Current Circuits
Lecture 10 Chapter 5 February 6, 2019.
Introduction to Motor Drives
Alternating Current Circuits
Alternating Current Circuits
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5 Lecture 10 Spring 2015

Nonlinear Elements 1. A nonlinear resistance 2. A nonlinear reactance 3. A time varying element in you circuit or system. 4. These elements show up in many form and the biological ones are more complicated than the electronic ones.

Basic Characteristic of Nonlinear Devices. 1. Nonlinear resistance,

An Ideal Harmonic Generator 1 The simple one is a diode. I= V o +αV 1 +βV V

Test Circuit

Results

Nonlinear Reactance 1. Use to convert power from one frequency to another. 2 Typical diode C~(V) -1/2 for step diode 3 How do you design a diode with a larger nonlinear capacitance? P-_ N _ P + N + N i N +

Parametric Amplifiers 1. Conservation of Energy on a photon basis 2. Conservation of momentum where k is the propagation constants

Parametric Amplifiers

Biological Amplifiers n13.html n13.html Neural Transmitter Releases up to 10 4 calcium ions Need to overcome the electrical threshold for firing

Stochastic Resonance

12

Nonlinear Effects at Cell Membranes 1.Current flow for 2.R m is the membrane resistance. The result is that the membrane is a poor rectifier. However AC voltages make the interior more negative.

AC Induced Current Flows At Low Frequencies Induced DC Currents for V AC from -60 to + 40mV For a spherical cell.

Shift in Membrane Firing Time Shift in firing time for Where u(t) is unit step function

Mode Locking of Oscillators Theory for injection locking of electronic oscillators is give by The theory is good for case where This worked for Aplysia pacemaker cells.

Threshold Injection Locking for an Aplysia Pacemaker Cell Frequency range from 2 to 10 Hz

Signal Noise Requirements for Phase Locking The phase of the inject signal must be stable enough so that the phase φ Where K is the linear control characteristic in units (2π Hz/V) and is closely related to the loop gain.

Locking of a Pacemaker Cell Response to various frequencies of injected currents.

Signal Coherence Litovitz showed that for 10µT coherence for 10 seconds or longer was required for signals at 55 or 65 Hz was required to change the activity of τ cell = 8 sec

Litovitz shows both space and time coherence help separate signals from Noise

Results Show 1. Both Space and time Coherence are important. 2 Small electric fields can lead to biological changes. 3. Magnetic fields can affect biological changes by a separate mechanism.

Effects of Time Delay Between E and J This can give Z in all four quadrants.

Membrane Capacity as a Function of Frequency Membrane Capacity is only a small function of voltage.

Repetitive Stimulation 1. Repetitive microwave pulse resulted in decreasing the amount of slowing for a pacemaker cell in Aplysia. 2. Repetitive electrical stimulation lead to decreases in the resistance of gap junctions and to a 62% increase in coupling between cells. 3. These are likely to be the result of feedback leading to adaptive responses.

A Neural Network Model for Adaptive Responses 1

Training to Recognize 60Hz as a Function of S/N with 97% Accuracy

Thermal Calculations Power in and rate of change of temperature Maximum Temperature change for a small sphere with total energy in H

Thermal Chemistry S = fraction that under gone chemical change K’ is the chemical reaction rate. R’ is the gas constant H’ is free energy, S’ is the entropy. This leads to an exponential of an exponential

Thermal Chemistry 1. Rule of thumb we are likely to see biological changes when 2. The body typically holds your temperature to +/- 0.5 o C 3. Very rapid changes in chemical reaction rates above a threshold. !!

The Rate of Change of Temperature is also Important. 1 We have shown the changes of 1/10 o C can change the firing rate of a pacemaker cell at 1 o C/sec. From the Nernst Equation Slow increases in T increased firing rates of a pacemaker cell rapid one decreased it. Changes seen with as little as 0.1 o C at rates of 1 o C/sec

Effects of Rapid Heating Picture from Aplysia

Discussion 1. It takes high powers and short pulses to get significant temperature differences on small objects. 2. Thin films have larger surface to volume ratios and cool faster than spheres. 3. Blood flow cools hot spots. 4. The thermal time constant is an important parameter and the sensitive to temperature change is one of the first measurements to make on any experiments involving RF or Microwaves.

Discussion 1. Temperature pulses lead to thermal expansion and can cause acoustic waves that can be sensed at a distance. 2. Example radar hearing.

Natural and Man-Made Fields 1. The atmosphere charged about 100/sec world wide with about an 18 sec time constant to about 130V/m 2. Peak values at about 3000V/m 3. Rapid decrease with frequency to typical value > 1 Hz of V/m 4. These numbers are all variable

Internal Fields 1. Across a membrane of 2 x 10 7 V/m 2. Nerve pulses about 0.4ms, rise time 0.1ms fall time 0.5ms. Dead space 1 to 3ms 3. Fields along the outside of a nerve cell 5x10 -2 V/m 4. These numbers are variable with position, type of cell etc.

Types of Noise 1. Thermal 2. Shot Noise 3. C/f n Noise 4. Noise generated by other electrical activity in the Body.

Thermal Noise. 1. P n = kTB = kTΔf 2. Other forms for matched loads 3 For thermal equilibrium. Non-equilibrium get negative temperatures.

Spontaneous Emission and Shot Noise 1 Spontaneous Emission P= hfΔf 2. Shot Noise 3. 1/f Noise or Where S(f) is the power spectral density

Example 1. For mylar film

Membrane Example. 1

Other Electrical Activity 1. EEG 2. ECG or EKG 3 Muscle movement. 4. Nerve Cells Firing

Minimum Detectable Electric Field Is a Function of Frequency Bovine Fibroblast Cells I= —10A/m 2