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Chapter 1 - Diodes and Applications

The document discusses electronics and electronic devices. It defines electronics as the science of controlling electrical energy electrically, where electrons play a fundamental role. Key components include transistors, diodes, integrated circuits, and microprocessors. It also covers fundamental solid-state principles like atomic structure, covalent bonding, and n-type and p-type semiconductors. Diodes and diode applications like rectifiers are explained, specifically single phase half-wave rectifiers and their operation with resistive loads.

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Hoang Dung Son
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views72 pages

Chapter 1 - Diodes and Applications

The document discusses electronics and electronic devices. It defines electronics as the science of controlling electrical energy electrically, where electrons play a fundamental role. Key components include transistors, diodes, integrated circuits, and microprocessors. It also covers fundamental solid-state principles like atomic structure, covalent bonding, and n-type and p-type semiconductors. Diodes and diode applications like rectifiers are explained, specifically single phase half-wave rectifiers and their operation with resistive loads.

Uploaded by

Hoang Dung Son
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 72

HCMC University of Technology and Education

FACULTY FOR HIGH QUALITY TRAINING

ELECTRONICS
www.hcmute.edu.vn
I. TUNING-IN

Group Discussion

Q1: What is electronics?

Q2: List electronic devices and their components.

Q3: What do electronic engineers deal with?

Q4: What are the differences between “electrical”


and “electronic” engineering?
2
II. DEFINITION
Electronics
Electronics is the science of controlling electrical
energy electrically, in which the ELECTRONS have
a fundamental role, involving ACTIVE electrical
components: ▪ Optoelectronics
▪ Vacuum tubes ▪ Sensors
▪ Transistors ▪ Passive electrical components,
▪ Diode, ▪ Interconnection technologies.
▪ Integrators (Wikipedia)

Semiconductor Electronic Electronic


devives circuits devicesand system
3
II. DEFINITION
Electronics
• Microprocessors
• Control
• Microcontrollers
• Information processing
• Application specific
• Signal processing integrated circuit
• Telecommucation (ASIC)
• Digital signal
• Switching
processing(DSP)
• Analog - digital • Field programmable
gate array (FPGA)
4
II. DEFINITION
Electronics

5
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

Atom

6
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

Atom

7
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

Atom

5, 6, 7, 8 4 1, 2, 3
valence electrons valence electrons valence electrons
8
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

Covalent Bonding

9
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

Covalent Bonding

10
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

N-type and P-type semiconductors


▪ Pure (intrinsic) semiconductors ➔ low conductivity as
a result of covalent bonding (and other factors).
▪ Doping ➔ adding impurity atoms to intrinsic silicon or
germanium to improve the conductivity of the
material.
▪ Two types of elements are used for doping:
- Trivalent elements ➔ 3 valence electrons.
- Pentavalent elements ➔ 5 valence electrons.
▪ A trivalent impurity is added to an intrinsic
semiconductor, ➔ p-type material.
▪ A pentavalent impurity is added to an intrinsic
semiconductor ➔ n-type material. 11
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

N-type semiconductor
• Antimony (Sb)
• Pentavalent
Free electron
impurity atom ➔conduction electron
• Donor atom

Forming covalent bonds with four


adjacent silicon atoms 12
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

N-type semiconductor

• Conduction band electrons > Valence band holes


• Electrons = majority carriers
• Holes = minority carriers
• Electrically neutral
13
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

P-type semiconductor
• Boron (B)
• Trivalent
impurity atom
Hole
• Acceptor
atom

Forming covalent bonds with four


adjacent silicon atoms 14
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

P-type semiconductor

• Conduction band electrons < Valence band holes


• Electrons = minority carriers
• Holes = majority carriers
• Electrically neutral
15
III. FUNDAMENTAL SOLID-STATE PRINCIPLES

N-type and P-type semiconductors

16
IV. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
Basic Structure

Symbol
A K
Anode Cathode
17
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation

Diodes in Industrial Applications


18
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
DIODE Commutation Conditions:
The condition must be met before the Diode can be
conducting :
▪ The DIODE must be forward biased (VA  VK).

VA VK
Diode

19
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
Operation: Forward Bias

+ -
ID > 0
A K
A K
VAK = VF = 0

Practical model: VF up to 1.25 V


20
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
Operation: Reverse Bias

- +

21
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
Operation: Reverse Bias

- +
ID = 0
A K
A K
VAK < 0

Reverse Voltage VPIV up to 1600 V


22
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
V-I Characteristic curve

VA ≥ VK
VA ≥ VK + VF
VA  VK + VF

VA  VK

Practical curve Ideal curve 23


II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
V-I Characteristic curve
VF = 0 V

Ideal curve 24
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
V-I Characteristic curve

VF = 0,7 V – Silicon
= 0,3 V - Germanium Practical curve
25
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
V-I Characteristic curve

VF = 0,7 V – Silicon
= 0,3 V - Germanium Practical curve
26
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation
•Determine V0 and I
•with 1 R1 = R2 = 10 k, Vi = 11V.

Vi

27
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

1. Diode Operation

DESIGN?

28
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier

Regulated 12 V power supply circuit.


29
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier


Uncontrolled AC/DC converters
➔ uncontrolled rectifiers
➔ convert an AC power supply source voltage to a
controlled DC load voltage.
➔ Generally, the device used most is the Diode

Input AC – DC Output
- AC CONVERTER - DC
Diode
- U1, f1 - U2

30
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier

Input Output
- AC AC – DC - DC
- U1, f1 CONVERTER
- U2
= constant = DC

Unrectified waveform Diode Rectified waveform


31
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier

Regulated 12 V power supply circuit.


32
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier


uin(V) Uin = UPN
+Um
P

Diode
uIN (q ) 0  2 3 4 q (rad)
R u0(q )

N
-Um
u0(V)
+Um
u0 (V)

vi (q ) = vPN (q )
q (rad)
= U m sin t = U 2 2 sin q [V ] 0  2 3 4
33
Operation with R Load 33
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier


+Um
uin(V)
Operation  2 3 4
0
with R Load
-Um
P u0(V)


Diode
uIN(q ) 2 3 4
R u0(q ) 0

N
The Peak Inverse
udiode(V)
Voltage
0  2 3 4
UPIV = UpLoad
34
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier


uin(V) Uin = UPN The average load voltage
2
1
VOAV = 
2 0
u(q)dq

q (rad) 1 
 2

0 2 3 4 =   UinPeak sin(q)dq +  0dq + 
2  0  
UinPeak
= = 0,45UinRMS
u0(V) 
The average load current
u0 (V)
Ud
Id =
q (rad) R

Operation with R Load 35


II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier


Vp = Vpeak = Vm = Vmaximum

Average value of the half-wave rectified signal


Ideal model: VpLoad = VpSource
Practical model: VpLoad = VpSource- 0,7
36
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier

Example: Average Voltage Calculation


37
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier

Example: Average Voltage/Current Calculation of Load

38
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

2. Single phase Half-wave Rectifier

Example: Average Voltage/Current Calculation of Load


39
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier

40
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Center-Tapped Full-Wave Rectifier
A

0
+

-
B 0

41
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Center-Tapped Full-Wave Rectifier
Positive half wave

During positive half-cycles, D1 is forward-


biased and D2 is reverse-biased 42
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Center-Tapped Full-Wave Rectifier
Negative half wave

During negative half-cycles, D2 is forward-


biased and D1 is reverse-biased
43
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Center-Tapped Full-Wave Rectifier
Ideal model:
VpLoad = VpSource
Practical model:
VpSource VpLoad = VpSource- 0,7

VpLoad

44
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Center-Tapped Full-Wave Rectifier
VpSource

VpLoad

The average load voltage: VAVG = 2*VpLoad / 

UPIV = 2*UpLoad
45
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Bridge Full-Wave Rectifier
A

E C

D
F

46
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Bridge Full-Wave Rectifier
A

E C

F D
During the positive half-cycle of the input, D1
and D2 are forward-biased and conduct
current. D3 and D4 are reverse-biased
47
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Bridge Full-Wave Rectifier
A

E C

F D
During the negative half-cycle of the input, D3
and D4 are forward-biased and conduct
current. D1 and D2 are reverse-biased
48
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Bridge Full-Wave Rectifier
VpSource

VpLoad

The average load voltage: VAVG = 2*VpLoad / 

Ideal model: VpLoad = VpSource


Practical model: VpLoad = VpSource- 1,4
49
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Bridge Full-Wave Rectifier

UPIV = UpLoad

50
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

Power supply filtering 51


II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

Power supply filtering with Capacitor-Input Filter

52
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

Power supply filtering with Capacitor-Input Filter


53
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

Power supply filtering with Capacitor-Input Filter

54
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

Ripple factor

Ripple Voltage

Load Average Voltage


55
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply with Voltage Regulator

56
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

IC

57
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators
Positive Voltage regulator C
IC 78XX Regulated output
voltage
7805 5V
7806 6V
7808 8V
7810 10V
7812 12V
7815 15V
7818 18V
7824 24V 58
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators
Negative Voltage regulator C
IC 79XX Regulated output
voltage
7905 - 5V
7906 - 6V
7908 - 8V
7910 - 10V
7912 - 12V
7915 - 15V
7918 - 18V
7924 - 24V 59
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators
IC

1 2
IN OUT
+ 7812 +
Vi Vo
GND
- C1 C2 -
3

60
II. DIODES AND APPLICATIONS

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Power Supply Filters And Regulators

61
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

3. Single phase Full-wave Rectifier


Types of special Purpose Diodes

62
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

1. LED – Light-Emitting Diode

LED
Symbol

LED
Datasheet
63
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

1. LED – Light-Emitting Diode

Typical LEDs 64
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

1. LED – Light-Emitting Diode

The 7-segment LED display


65
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

1. LED – Light-Emitting Diode

VBIAS − VF
RLIMIT =
ILED

Simple LED circuit design


66
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

2. Zener Diode

Zener diode symbol


General zener diode V-Icharacteristic
Zener diodes ➔ in reverse breakdown
Zener breakdown ➔ low reverse voltages
Zener breakdown voltage (VZ)
➔ create current through K to A 67
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

2. Zener Diode
K

-VKA >= VZ ➔ ON

Ideal zener diode equivalent circuit model


and the characteristic curve 68
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

2. Zener Diode

+
K

VOUT

A
-

ZENER DIODE APPLICATION IN VOLTAGE REGULATION


69
III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

2. Zener Diode

ZENER DIODE APPLICATION IN VOLTAGE REGULATION 70


III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

2. Zener Diode +

Zener Values:
- VZ
VZ VOUT
- IZ_Max

 RL
 RL  RL  VIN  VZ
 R + R VIN  VZ  R + R VIN  VZ  RL + R
 L  L 
 I I  I −I  I  VIN − VZ − VZ  I
 Z Z _Max  T L Z _Max  R RL
Z _Max

➔ VOUT = VZ and IZ <= IZ_Max ➔ In good operation

ZENER DIODE APPLICATION IN VOLTAGE REGULATION 71


III. SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES

2. Zener Diode

ZENER DIODE APPLICATION IN VOLTAGE REGULATION

72

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