Camera Flash Work
Camera Flash Work
Camera Flash Work
Electronics Videos
The Boost
In the last section, we saw that a flash circuit needs to turn a battery's low voltage into a
high voltage in order to light up a xenon tube. There are dozens of ways to arrange this
sort of step-up circuit, but most configurations contain the same basic elements. All of
these components are explained in other HowStuffWorks articles:
• Capacitors - Devices that store energy by collecting charge on plates (see How
Capacitors Work)
• Inductors - Coiled lengths of wire that store up energy by generating magnetic
fields (see How Inductors Work)
• Diodes - Semiconductor devices that let current flow freely in only one direction
(see How Semiconductors Work)
• Transistors - Semiconductor devices that can act as electrically controlled
switches or amplifiers (see How Amplifiers Work)
The diagram below shows how all of these elements come together in a basic flash
circuit.
Taken in its entirety, this diagram may seem a little overwhelming, but if we break it
down into its component parts, it isn't that complicated.
Let's start with the heart of the circuit, the main transformer, the device that actually
boosts the voltage. The transformer consists of two inductors in close proximity to each
other (for example, one might be wound around the other, with both might be wound
around an iron core).
If you've read How Electromagnets Work, you know that passing current through a
coiled length of wire will generate a magnetic field. If you've read How Inductors Work,
you know that a fluctuating magnetic field, generated by fluctuating electric current, will
cause a voltage change in a conductor. The basic idea of a transformer is to run current
through one inductor (the primary coil) to magnetize another conductor (the secondary
coil), causing a change in voltage in the second coil.
If you vary the size of the two inductors -- the number of loops in each coil -- you can
boost (or reduce) voltage from the primary to the secondary. In a step-up transformer like
the one in the flash circuit, the secondary coil has many more loops than the primary coil.
As a result, the magnetic field and (by extension) voltage are greater in the secondary coil
than in the primary coil. The trade-off is that the secondary coil has weaker current than
the primary coil. (Check out this site for more information.)
The circuit does this with a simple oscillator. The oscillator's main elements are the
primary and secondary coils of the transformer, another inductor (the feedback coil), and
a transistor, which acts as an electrically controlled switch.
When you press the charging button it closes the charging switch so that a short burst of
current flows from the battery through the feedback coil to the base of the transistor.
Applying current to the base of the transistor allows current to flow from the transistor
collector to the emitter -- it makes the transistor briefly conductive (see How Amplifiers
Work for details).
When the transistor is "switched on" in this way, a burst of current can flow from the
battery to the primary coil of the transformer. The burst in current causes a change in
voltage in the secondary coil, which in turn causes a change in voltage in the feedback
coil. This voltage in the feedback coil conducts current to the transistor base, making the
transistor conductive again, and the process repeats. The circuit keeps interrupting itself
in this way, gradually boosting voltage through the transformer. This oscillating action
produces the high-pitch whine you hear when a flash is charging up.
Flash capacitor from a regular point-and-shoot camera
The high-voltage current then passes through a diode, which acts as a rectifier -- it only
lets current flow one way, so it changes the fluctuating current from the transformer back
into steady direct current.
The flash circuit stores this high-voltage charge in a large capacitor. Like a battery, the
capacitor holds the charge until it's hooked up to a closed circuit.
The capacitor is connected to the two electrodes on the flash tube at all times, but unless
the xenon gas is ionized, the tube can't conduct the current, so the capacitor can't
discharge.
The capacitor circuit is also connected to a smaller gas discharge tube by way of a
resistor. When the voltage in the capacitor is high enough, current can flow through the
resistor to light up the small tube. This acts as an indicator light, telling you when the
flash is ready to go.
The capacitor in a typical camera flash circuit can store a lot of juice. We charged this one
up and then discharged it by connecting the two terminals. Check out this short video to
see what happened. (Kids, don't try this at home!)
The flash trigger is wired to the shutter mechanism. When you take a picture, the trigger
closes briefly, connecting the capacitor to a second transformer. This transformer boosts
the 200-volt current from the capacitor up to between 1,000 and 4,000 volts, and passes
the high-voltage current onto the metal plate next to the flash tube. The momentary high
voltage on the metal plate provides the necessary energy to ionize the xenon gas, making
the gas conductive. The flash lights up in synch with the shutter opening.
Different electronic flashes may have more complex circuitry than this, but most work in
the same basic way. It's simply a matter of boosting battery voltage to trigger a small gas
discharge lamp.
For much more information on camera flashes, including flashes that "read" the subject in
front of them, check out the links on the next page.
If you've read How Cameras Work, you know that it takes a lot of light to expose a vivid
image onto film. For most indoor photography, where there is relatively little ambient
light, you either need to expose the film for a longer period of time or momentarily
increase the light level to get a clear picture. Increasing the exposure time doesn't work
well for most subjects, because any quick motion, including the movement of the camera
itself, makes for a blurry picture.
Electronic flashes are a simple, cheap solution to this inherent problem in photography.
Their sole purpose is to emit a short burst of bright light when you release the shutter.
This illuminates the room for the fraction of a second the film is exposed.
In this article, we'll find out exactly how these devices carry out this important task. As
we'll see, a standard camera flash is a great demonstration of how basic electronic
components can work together in a simple circuit.
Making a Flash
A basic camera flash system, like you would find in a point-and-shoot camera, has three
major parts.
The two components on the ends of the system are very simple. When you hook up a
battery's two terminals to a circuit, the battery forces electrons to flow through the circuit
from one terminal to the other. The moving electrons, or current, provides energy to the
various things connected to the circuit (see How Batteries Work for more information).
The discharge tube is a lot like a neon light or fluorescent lamp. It consists of a tube filled
with xenon gas, with electrodes on either end and a metal trigger plate at the middle of
the tube.
The basic idea is to conduct electrical current -- to move free electrons -- through the gas
in the tube, from one electrode to the other. As the free electrons move, they energize
xenon atoms, causing the atoms to emit visible light photons (see How Light Works for
details on how atoms generate photons).
You can't do this with the gas in its normal state, because it has very few free electrons --
that is, nearly all the electrons are bonded to atoms, so there are almost no charged
particles in the gas. To make the gas conductive, you have to introduce free electrons into
the mix.
Another camera flash tube design: In this curved tube, the
trigger plate is attached directly to the glass on the tube.
This is the metal trigger plate's job. If you briefly apply a high positive voltage
(electromotive force) to this plate, it will exert a strong attraction on the negatively
charged electrons in the atoms. If this attraction is strong enough, it will pull the electrons
free from the atoms. The process of removing an atom's electrons is called ionization.
The free electrons have a negative charge, so once they are free, they will move toward
the positively charged terminal and away from the negatively charged terminal. As the
electrons move, they collide with other atoms, causing these atoms to lose electrons as
well, further ionizing the gas. The speeding electrons collide with xenon atoms, which
become energized and generate light (see How Fluorescent Lamps Work for more
information).
To accomplish this, you need relatively high voltage (electrical "pressure"). It takes a
couple hundred volts to move electrons between the two electrodes, and you need a few
thousand volts to introduce enough free electrons to make the gas conductive.
A typical camera battery only offers 1.5 volts, so the flash circuit needs to boost the
voltage substantially. In the next section, we'll find out how it does this.