Lecture 1
Lecture 1
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
5
Current
•Symbol: I
•Unit: Ampere
7
Series Connection of Cells
8
Parallel Connection of Cells
9
Resistor Concept —I
10
Resistor Symbols
Resistor Concept —II
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
– As current provider.
14
Resistance Composition
15
Resistance Examples
Contact leads
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.
17
Color Codes of Resistance
19
Units and Conversions
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
23
Ohmmeter Connection
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
11 2
27
Example
R2 R3
Rtotal R1
R2 R3
1 1 3
Rtotal 1 1.5kW
11 2
28
Variable Resistance Concept
Resistive material
Stationary contact
Terminal B Wiper Terminal A Terminal B Wiper Terminal A
•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
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