Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

M053 Review for Units 1 and 2. 1. What are other terms for rise and decay of current and voltage in a circuit?

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "M053 Review for Units 1 and 2. 1. What are other terms for rise and decay of current and voltage in a circuit?"— Presentation transcript:

1 M053 Review for Units 1 and 2

2 1. What are other terms for rise and decay of current and voltage in a circuit?

3 Increase and decrease of current and voltage in a circuit.

4 2. When does current reach its maximum value in a resistive circuit?

5 Instantly when the resistive circuit is energized.

6 3. Which line represents time and which line current in a time graph?

7 The horizontal line represents time and the vertical line represents current.

8 4. What are time constants?

9 Marks on the time line that show time periods.

10 5. On a time line, where does the second time period begin?

11 At T 1.

12 6. What do T 0, T 1, T 2, T 3, etc., refer to?

13 Time periods or time constants.

14 7. What is an LR circuit?

15 A circuit that has both inductance and resistance.

16 8. How many time periods does it take for current in a LR circuit to reach maximum value?

17 Five.

18 9. How many time constants does it take for current in an LR circuit to decay?

19 Five.

20 10. What is the abbreviation for time constant?

21 TC.

22 11. What is the term used to identify/measure time constants?

23 Milliseconds or microseconds.

24 12. What is the Universal Time Constant Chart?

25 A graph which shows percentage values on the rise and decay curves at each of the five time constants.

26 13. What is the mathematical formula for time constants?

27 TC=L/R

28 14. What is a growth curve?

29 A curve that shows the rise of current.

30 15. What is the percentage value on a decay curve at T 3 ?

31 5%.

32 16. What is the percentage value on a growth curve at T 4 ?

33 98%.

34 17. What is a capacitor?

35 An electrical device that stores energy and then releases it later.

36 18. What are the two conducting surfaces of a capacitor called?

37 Plates.

38 19. What is another term that is often used instead of the word “capacitor”?

39 Condenser.

40 20. What types of non-conducting material can be used to separate the plates of a capacitor?

41 Air, paper, or liquid.

42 21. When is a capacitor said to be charged?

43 When it has potential difference between the two plates.

44 22. What is capacitance?

45 The ability of two conducting surfaces, separated by some form of non-conducting material, to store an electrical charge.

46 23. What factors determine the capacitance of a capacitor?

47 1. The surface are of the plates., 2. The distance between the plates., and 3. The dielectric used between the plates.

48 24. What effect does the amount of voltage applied to a capacitor have in the capacitance?

49 No effect.

50 25. What happens to capacitance if the plate areas of a capacitor are doubled?

51 The capacitance is doubled.

52 26. What are dielectric constants?

53 The numerical ratings given dielectric materials based on their relationship to air.

54 27. How do you find total capacitance in a series circuit?

55 Use the same rule for determining total resistance in a parallel circuit.

56 28. What is capacitive reactance?

57 The opposition to current flow that a capacitor offers in an AC circuit.

58 29. What is the unit of measurement of capacitance?

59 The farad.

60 30. How many farads is a picofarad?

61 1/1,000,000,000,000 of a farad.

62 31. How is capacitive reactance (X C ) measured?

63 In ohms.

64 32. When will current flow stop in a DC circuit with a capacitor wired into it?

65 When capacitor voltage equals applied voltage.

66 33. What is another name for a vacuum tube?

67 An electron tube.

68 34. What do you call a tube from which all of the air has been removed?

69 A vacuum tube.

70 35. Which is the positive electrode in a vacuum tube?

71 The anode.

72 36. What is the name of the negative electrode in a vacuum tube?

73 The cathode.

74 37. What is the name of the glass or metal housing around a vacuum tube?

75 An envelope.

76 38. What electronic elements are found inside a vacuum tube?

77 Electrodes.

78 39. What is the giving off of electrons from a heated cathode called?

79 Emitting electrons.

80 40. What is another term for cathode.

81 Emitter.

82 41. Which electrode is sometimes called the emitter?

83 The cathode.

84 42. Which electrode is sometimes called the collector?

85 The anode.

86 43. What is the heater wire in a vacuum tube called?

87 A filament wire.

88 44. When is the cathode in a vacuum tube said to be directly heated?

89 When the cathode and the filament are the same.

90 45. How many electrodes are in a diode?

91 Two.

92 46. What is a triode?

93 A vacuum tube that has three electrodes.

94 47. What is the wire screen in a vacuum tube called?

95 A grid.

96 48. What does the control grid do in a vacuum tube?

97 It controls the flow of electrons from the cathode to the anode.

98 49. What are the electrodes in a triode?

99 The cathode, the anode, and the control grid.

100 50. What do you call a vacuum tube with four electrodes?

101 A tetrode.

102 51. What are the four electrodes in a tetrode?

103 The anode, the cathode, the screen grid, and the control grid.

104 52. What is a pentode?

105 A vacuum tube which contains five electrodes.

106 53. What are the five electrodes in a pentode?

107 The cathode, the anode, the control grid, the screen grid, and the suppressor grid.

108 54. What can a vacuum tube be used for?

109 To change AC current to DC and to increase the strength of an electrical signal.

110 55. How does a transistor differ from a vacuum tube?

111 Transistors weigh less, are smaller but stronger than vacuum tubes, and require no warm-up time.

112 56. What can very hot weather do to a transistor?

113 It can cause the transistor to stop working.

114 57. What are the three basic parts of a transistor?

115 The emitter, the base, and the collector.

116 58. What are two types of materials that transistors are made from?

117 P-type and N-type material.

118 59. What elements are in P- type material?

119 Germanium and indium.

120 60. What part of a transistor is comparable to the cathode in a vacuum tube?

121 The emitter.

122 61. Where is the base of a transistor located?

123 Between the emitter and the collector.

124 62. What is the collector in a transistor comparable to in a vacuum tube?

125 An anode.

126 63. What is a PNP transistor?

127 One in which the emitter and collector are made of P-type material.

128 64. Which direction does current flow in an NPN transistor?

129 From the emitter to the collector.

130 65. What is the primary use of a transistor?

131 As a current-, voltage-, or power- amplifying device.

132 66. What does a rectifier do?

133 Changes alternating current to pulsating direct current.

134 67. What is an amplifier?

135 An electronic component that amplifies a signal.

136 68. What is gain?

137 The ratio of output to input signal.

138 69. What is the simplest type of amplifier?

139 A single-ended amplifier.

140 M053 Review for Units 3 and 4

141 1. What device transfers electrical energy from one circuit to another by electromagnetic induction?

142 A transformer.

143 2. What type of transformer transfers a high voltage to a low voltage?

144 A step-down transformer.

145 3. What two types of cores are used for transformers?

146 An iron core and an air core.

147 4. Does a transformer have an AC or a DC source for continuous output?

148 An AC source.

149 5. How does a transformer transfer electrical energy from one circuit to another?

150 By electromagnetic induction.

151 6. What are the main shapes used for iron-core transformers?

152 Hollow core and shell.

153 7. What is another name for a shell-type core?

154 E- and I- type core.

155 8. Which transformer core is the most commonly used?

156 The shell-type core.

157 9. Which winding on a transformer is connected to the power source?

158 The primary winding.

159 10. What is the secondary winding on a transformer connect to?

160 The load.

161 11. What is the simplest type of transformer winding?

162 The single-secondary transformer.

163 12. When is a multi-secondary transformer used?

164 When more than one voltage is required.

165 13. What type of transformer secondary has two equal outputs of opposite polarity?

166 A center-tapped transformer.

167 14. What is a 1:1 ratio transformer?

168 A transformer in which the source voltage matches the voltage required by the rest of the power supply.

169 15. What kind of transformer loss occurs as a result of the small amount of resistance present in any coil or wire?

170 Copper loss.

171 16. What can be done to reduce copper loss?

172 Windings are made of low- resistance copper.

173 17. What do you call the power loss caused by random current flow within a core?

174 Eddy-current loss.

175 18. How are transformer cores made in order to reduce eddy- current loss?

176 They are made with laminated slices of steel insulated with varnish.

177 19. What is hysteresis loss?

178 The energy lost when aligning the magnetic units within the core when the field changes direction.

179 20. How does an increase in frequency of the applied voltage affect hysteresis loss?

180 A greater loss through heat dissipation occurs when the frequency of applied voltage is increased.

181 21. What type of transformer core is used to reduce hysteresis loss?

182 Air cores.

183 22. What type of transformer core is used with frequencies in the audio range?

184 Iron cores.

185 23. What type of transformer loss can be thought of as resulting from a kind of friction?

186 Hysteresis loss.

187 24. What happens to current when frequency is increased in a transformer?

188 Current is decreased.

189 25. What is determined by the type and thickness of the insulation of the windings of a transformer?

190 The voltage-handling capacity.

191 26. What determines the power- handling capacity of a transformer?

192 The cooling ability of the transformer.

193 27. What is determined by the diameter of the wire used in the windings of a transformer?

194 The current-handling capacity.

195 28. What is indicated on the front or side of a transformer?

196 The voltage-, current-, and power- handling capacity.

197 29. What is a diode?

198 A device that allows current to flow easily in one direction, but offers opposition to current flow in the other direction.

199 30. What is the function of a rectifier in a circuit?

200 It converts AC voltage into pulsating DC voltage.

201 31. When does reverse bias exist?

202 When the cathode is more positive than the anode.

203 32. What is an alternation?

204 Half of a cycle.

205 33. What is the key to rectifier operation?

206 A diode.

207 34. What two alternations does a cycle of AC have?

208 Positive and negative alternation.

209 35. What does a half-wave rectifier block?

210 Either the positive or negative alternation of the AC circuit in the transformer secondary.

211 36. What is negative pulsating DC voltage?

212 The voltage produced from the output of a rectifier when the rectifier blocks the positive AC half-cycles.

213 37. How many diodes does a half wave rectifier have?

214 One.

215 38. What is the simplest rectifier circuit?

216 A half-wave rectifier circuit.

217 39. What is positive pulsating DC voltage?

218 The voltage produced from the output of a rectifier when the rectifier blocks the negative AC half-cycle.

219 40. What does the diode block in a half-wave rectifier?

220 Either the positive or negative alternation of the AC current in the secondary.

221 41. Which output voltage has less variation, the output from a full-wave rectifier, or the output from a half wave rectifier?

222 Full-wave rectifier output voltage.

223 42. How many diodes are there in a full-wave rectifier?

224 Two.

225 43. Which rectifier uses two diodes to convert each negative and positive alternation of the input AC voltage to one polarity at the output?

226 A full-wave rectifier.

227 44. What does the center-tapped transformer do in the transformer secondary?

228 It splits the secondary AC voltage into two equal AC voltages.

229 45. How many diodes are conducting at a given time in a bridge rectifier?

230 Two.

231 46. How many diodes does a bridge rectifier have?

232 Four.

233 47. How are the diodes in a bridge rectifier arranged?

234 In a diamond pattern.

235 48. What is the main advantage of using a full-wave rectifier?

236 There is low voltage variation in the output.

237 49. What is the main advantage of using a bridge rectifier?

238 It has low voltage variation and high voltage output.

239 50. What are the disadvantages of a full-wave rectifier?

240 It has more components than a half-wave rectifier, and it has low output voltage.


Download ppt "M053 Review for Units 1 and 2. 1. What are other terms for rise and decay of current and voltage in a circuit?"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google