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Basics of Electronics Conductors: have low resistance which allows electrical current flow easily. Insulators: have high resistance which suppresses electrical current flow. Semiconductors: a solid substance that has a conductivity between that of an insulator and that of most metals, either due to the addition of an impurity or because of temperature effects. Devices made of semiconductors, notably silicon, are essential components of most electronic circuits..
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Conductor Good conductors have low resistance so electrons flow through them with ease. Best element conductors include: Copper, silver, gold, aluminum, & nickel Alloys are also good conductors: Brass & steel Good conductors can also be liquid: Salt water
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The atomic structure of good conductors usually includes only one electron in their outer shell.
It is called a valence electron. It is easily striped from the atom, producing current flow. Copper Atom
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Insulators Insulators have a high resistance so current does not flow in them. Good insulators include: Glass, ceramic, plastics, & wood Most insulators are compounds of several elements. The atoms are tightly bound to one another so electrons are difficult to strip away for current flow.
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Overview Introduction What are P-type and N-type semiconductors??
What are Diodes? Forward Bias & Reverse Bias Characteristics Of Ideal Diode I – V Characteristics of Diodes Rectifiers
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Introduction Semiconductors are materials whose electrical properties lie between Conductors and Insulators. Ex : Silicon and Germanium
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Insulator, semiconductor and conductor
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What are P-type and N-type ?
Semiconductors are classified in to P-type and N-type semiconductor P-type: A P-type material is one in which holes are majority carriers i.e. they are positively charged materials (++++) N-type: A N-type material is one in which electrons are majority charge carriers i.e. they are negatively charged materials (-----)
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Diodes Electronic devices created by bringing together a p-type and n-type region within the same semiconductor lattice. Used for rectifiers, LED etc
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Diodes It is represented by the following symbol, where the arrow indicates the direction of positive current flow.
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Forward Bias and Reverse Bias
Forward Bias : Connect positive of the Diode to positive of supply and negative of Diode to negative of supply. Reverse Bias: Connect positive of the Diode to negative of supply and negative of diode to positive of supply.
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Characteristics of Diode
Diode always conducts in one direction. Diodes always conduct current when “Forward Biased” ( Zero resistance) Diodes do not conduct when Reverse Biased (Infinite resistance)
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I-V characteristics of Ideal diode
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I-V Characteristics of Practical Diode
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Rectifiers and its type:
Rectifiers : an electrical device which converts an alternating current into a direct one by allowing a current to flow through it in one direction only.
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Types of Rectifiers Half wave rectifier Full wave rectifier
Center tape full wave rectifier Bridge rectifier
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Half wave rectification
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Working Of Half wave Rectifier
In Half Wave Rectifier one step down transformer & one diode are used. So it convert half wave of a.c into d.c
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Full wave rectification
For single-phase AC, if the transformer is center-tapped, then two diodes back-to-back (i.e. anodes-to-anode or cathode-to-cathode) can form a full-wave rectifier.
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Full wave rectifier using transformer and 2 diodes
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Full wave rectifier using transformer and 2 diodes
In a circuit with a non - center tapped transformer, four diodes are required instead of the one needed for half-wave rectification.
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Full wave rectifier working animation
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Working A bridge rectifier makes use of four diodes in a bridge arrangement to achieve full-wave rectification. It convert both half cycle of a.c into d.c.its efficiency higher then center tape full wave rectifier .
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Transistors What is a Transistor? Types Characteristics Applications
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What is a Transistor? A transistor is a miniature electronic component that can do two different jobs. It can work either as an amplifier or a switch: When it works as an amplifier, it takes in a tiny electric current at one end (an input current) and produces a much bigger electric current (an output current) at the other Semiconductors: ability to change from conductor to insulator Can either allow current or prohibit current to flow Useful as a switch, but also as an amplifier Essential part of many technological advances
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The Transistor is Born Bell Labs (1947): Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley Originally made of germanium Current transistors made of doped silicon
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How Transistors Work Doping: adding small amounts of other elements to create additional protons or electrons P-Type: dopants lack a fourth valence electron (Boron, Aluminum) N-Type: dopants have an additional (5th) valence electron (Phosphorus, Arsenic) Importance: Current only flows from P to N
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Types of Transistor Transistors are basically classified into two types; they are Bipolar JunctionTransistors (BJT) and Field Effect Transistors (FET). The BJTs are again classified into NPN and PNP transistors. The FET transistors are classified into JFET and MOSFET
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Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT)
3 adjacent regions of doped Si (each connected to a lead): Base. (thin layer,less doped). Collector. Emitter. 2 types of BJT: npn. pnp. Most common: npn (focus on it). npn bipolar junction transistor pnp bipolar junction transistor
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FET The field-effect transistor (FET) is a transistor that uses an electric field to control the electrical behaviour of the device. FETs are also known as unipolar transistors since they involve single-carrier-type operation.
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FET The conductivity between the drain and source terminals is controlled by an electric field in the device, which is generated by the voltage difference between the body and the gate of the device
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