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Lecture 1

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Lecture 1

Uploaded by

abdallameme015
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Electronics

1
Basic Electronics (Outline)
1. The Components of Electricity
2. Volt-Ohm-Meter Basics
3. Circuit Diagrams Basics
4. The Resistance
5. Ohm’s Law
6. The Capacitor
7. The Inductor
8. The Diode
9. The Transistor (Electronic Valves)

2
Components of Electricity
• Voltage: is the force pushing electrons through a wire
• Current :Electrons in a wire (flowing electrons is called
Current)
• Resistance :is the force that slows the flow of electrons
• Types of Current: AC and DC
• Circuits
• Close
• Open

3
Types of Current

• There are 2 types of current


• The type is determined only by the direction the
current flows through a conductor
• Direct Current (DC)
• Flows in only one direction negative toward
positive pole of source
• Alternating Current (AC)
• Flows back and forth because the poles of the
source alternate between positive and negative
4
Charge
•Symbol: (q)
•Unit: Coulomb (C)

–The fundamental electric quantity –Charge in an electron:


is charge.
qe = -1.602x10-19 C
–Atoms are composed of charge
carrying particles: electrons and
protons, and neutral particles, –Charge in a proton:
neutrons.
qp = 1.602x10-19 C
–The smallest amount of charge
that exists is carried by an electron
and a proton.

5
Current
•Symbol: I
•Unit: Ampere

–Current moves through a – Essentially, flow of electrons in an


circuit element “through electric circuit leads to the
variable.” establishment of current.
–Current is rate of flow of I(t) =
dq
negatively-charged particles, dt
called electrons, through a
predetermined cross-sectional o q : relatively charged electrons
area in a conductor. (C)
–Like water flow. o Amp = C/sec
o Often measured in milliamps,
mA
6
Voltage
•Symbol: V
•Unit: Volt

– Potential difference across – Let A be the lower potential/voltage


two terminals in a circuit terminal
“across variable.”
– Let B be the higher potential/voltage
– In order to move charge from terminal
point A to point B, work
o Then, voltage across A and B is the
needs to be done.
cost in energy required to move a unit
– Like potential energy at a positive charge from A to B.
water fall.

7
Series Connection of Cells

• Each cell provides 1.5 V


• Two cells connected one after another, in series, provide 3 V, while
three cells would provide 4.5 V
• Polarities matter

8
Parallel Connection of Cells

• If the cells are connected in parallel, the voltage stays at 1.5 V,


but now a larger current can be drawn.

9
Resistor Concept —I

•Flow of electric current through a conductor experiences a certain amount of


resistance.
•The resistance, expressed in ohms (W, named after George ohm), kilo-ohms (kW,
1000W), or mega-ohms (MW, 106W) is a measure of how much a resistor resists
the flow of electricity.
•The magnitude of resistance is dictated by electric properties of the material and
material geometry.
•This behavior of materials is often used to control/limit electric current flow in
circuits.
•Henceforth, the conductors that exhibit the property of resisting current flow are
called resistors.

10
Resistor Symbols
Resistor Concept —II

•A resistor is a dissipative element. It converts electrical energy into heat energy. It


is analogous to the viscous friction element of mechanical system.
•When electrons enter at one end of a resistor, some of the electrons collide with
atoms within the resistor. These atoms start vibrating and transfer their energy to
neighboring air molecules. In this way, a resistor dissipates electrical energy into
heat energy.
•Resistors can be thought of as analogous to water carrying pipes. Water is
supplied to your home in large pipes, however, the pipes get smaller as the water
reaches the final user. The pipe size limits the water flow to what you actually
need.
•Electricity works in a similar manner, except that wires have so little resistance
that they would have to be very very thin to limit the flow of electricity. Such thin
wire would be hard to handle and break easily.

11
Resistance

12
Resistance Characteristic
•In a typical resistor, a conducting element displays linear voltage-current
relationship. (i.e., current through a resistor is directly proportional to the
voltage across it).
I V
•Using G as a constant of proportionality, we obtain:
I = GV
•Equivalently,
V = RI (or V = IR)
where R = 1/G.
–R is termed as the resistance of conductor (ohm, W)
–G is termed as the conductance of conductor (mho, )

13
Resistance Applications

• Resistance used for:


– Limiting current in electric circuits.

– Lowering voltage levels in electric circuits (using voltage divider).

– As current provider.

– As a sensor (e.g., photoresistor detects light condition, thermistor


detects temperature condition, strain gauge detects load condition,
etc.)

– In electronic circuits, resistors are used as pull-up and pull-down


elements to avoid floating signal levels.

14
Resistance Composition

• It is very important to be aware of power rating of resistance used in


circuits and to make sure that this limit is not violated. A higher power
rating resistor can dissipate more energy that a lower power rating
resistor.
• Resistance can be made of:
– Carbon film (decomposition of carbon film on a ceramic core).
– Carbon composition (carbon powder and glue-like binder).
– Metal oxide (ceramic core coated with metal oxide).
– Precision metal film.
– High power wire wound.

15
Resistance Examples

Contact leads

Symbol for resistor


Resistor

16
Resistance Labels
• Wire-wound resistors have a label indicating resistance and power ratings.
• A majority of resistors have color bars to indicate their resistance magnitude.
• There are usually 4 to 6 bands of color on a resistor. As shown in the figure
below, the right most color bar indicates the resistor reliability, however, some
resistor use this bar to indicate the tolerance. The color bar immediately left to
the tolerance bar (C), indicates the multipliers (in tens). To the left of the
multiplier bar are the digits, starting from the last digit to the first digit.

Resistor value = AB 10  tol%(W) C

17
Color Codes of Resistance

Band color Digit Multiplier


Black 0 X1
Brown 1 X10
Color Tolerance Red 2 X100
Brown 1% Orange 3 X1000
Yellow 4 X10000
Red 2%
Green 5 X100000
Gold 5% Blue 6 X1000000
Silver 10% Purple 7 X10000000
Grey 8 X100000000
None ±20%
White 9 X1000000000
Silver - x.01
Gold - x.1
18
• The first band is yellow, so the first digit is 4
• The second band is violet, so the second digit is 7
2
• The third band is red, so the multiplier is 10
• Resistor value is 47 102  5%(W)

19
Units and Conversions

Abbreviation Means Multiply unit by Or


p pico .000000000001 10 -12
n nano .000000001 10 -9
µ micro .000001 10 -6
m milli .001 10 -3
. Unit 1 10 0
k kilo 1,000 10 3
M mega 1,000,000 10 6
G giga 1,000,000,000 10 9

20
Digital Multimeter

• Voltmeter
– Parallel connection
• Ammeter
– Series connection
• Ohmmeter
– Without any power supplied
• Adjust range (start from highest limit if you don’t know)

21
Ammeter Connection

• Break the circuit so that the ammeter can be connected in series


• All the current flowing in the circuit must pass through the
ammeter
• An ammeter must have a very LOW input impedance
22
Voltmeter Connection

• The voltmeter is connected in parallel between two


points of circuit
• A voltmeter should have a very high input impedance

23
Ohmmeter Connection

• An ohmmeter does not function with a circuit connected to a


power supply
• Must take it out of the circuit altogether and test it separately

24
Resistance in case of Series

Rtotal=R1+R2

Rtotal=1+1=2kΩ

25
Series

• R = R1 + R2 + R3
• VT=V1+V2+V3
• IT= I1 = I2 = I3

26
Resistance in case of Parallel
• IT = I1 + I2 +I3
• V T = V1 = V2 = V 3

R1  R2
Rtotal 
R1  R2
1 1 1
Rtotal    0.5kW
11 2

27
Example

R2  R3
Rtotal  R1 
R2  R3
1 1 3
Rtotal  1    1.5kW
11 2

28
Variable Resistance Concept

•In electrical circuit, a switch is used


to turn the electricity on and off just
like a valve is used to turn the water
on and off.
•There are times when you want Water
in
some water but don’t need all the
water that the pipe can deliver, so you
control water flow by adjusting the Movable arm
faucet.
•Unfortunately, you can’t adjust the
thickness of an already thin wire.
•Notice, however, that you can
control the water flow by forcing the
water through an adjustable length of
29
rocks, as shown to the right.
Variable Resistance Construction
Wiper contact

Resistive material

Stationary contact
Terminal B Wiper Terminal A Terminal B Wiper Terminal A

• To vary the resistance in an electrical circuit, we use a variable resistor.


•This is a normal resistor with an additional arm contact that can move along
the resistive material and tap off the desired resistance. 30
Variable Resistance Operation

•The dial on the variable resistor moves the arm contact and sets the
resistance between the left and center pins. The remaining resistance of the
part is between the center and right pins.
•For example, when the dial is turned fully to the left, there is minimal
resistance between the left and center pins (usually 0W) and maximum
resistance between the center and right pins. The resistance between the left
and right pins will always be the total resistance.

Center pin

Symbol for variable resistor

Left pin Right pin

31
Variable Resistance

Photoresistance Thermistor

32
Specific Resistance

ρ = RA/L
where:
R = the resistance
ρ = specific resistance of material (material property)
L = length of conductor used to make the resistor
A = cross-section area of conductor used to make the
resistor

33
Units

34
Prefixes

35

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