UJT Triggering Circuit
UJT Triggering Circuit
Working of Capacitor
Lab Experiment
Aim: The UJT circuit is a relaxation oscillator which creates a train of pulses depending on the RC timing
circuit. These pulses are generated across R0 and are connected to the gate of the SCR. this in turn
switch on the SCR appropriately. This can be viewed by see in the voltage drop across the load.
Apparatus required
Power card
CRO
60W Bulb
This method of securing SCR conduction is called triggering, and it is by far the most
common way that SCRs are latched in actual practice. In fact, SCRs are usually chosen so
that their breakover voltage is far beyond the greatest voltage expected to be experienced
from the power source, so that it can be turned on only by an intentional voltage pulse
applied to the gate.
It should be mentioned that SCRs may sometimes be turned off by directly shorting their
gate and cathode terminals together, or by "reverse-triggering" the gate with a negative
voltage (in reference to the cathode), so that the lower transistor is forced into cutoff. I say
this is "sometimes" possible because it involves shunting all of the upper transistor's
collector current past the lower transistor's base. This current may be substantial, making
triggered shut-off of an SCR difficult at best. A variation of the SCR, called a Gate-TurnOf thyristor, or GTO, makes this task easier. But even with a GTO, the gate current required
to turn it off may be as much as 20% of the anode (load) current! The schematic symbol for
a GTO is shown in the following illustration: (Figure below)
If the SCR fails to latch, the problem may be with the load and not the SCR. A certain
minimum amount of load current is required to hold the SCR latched in the "on" state. This
minimum current level is called the holding current. A load with too great a resistance value
may not draw enough current to keep an SCR latched when gate current ceases, thus
giving the false impression of a bad (unlatchable) SCR in the test circuit. Holding current
values for different SCRs should be available from the manufacturers. Typical holding
current values range from 1 milliamp to 50 milliamps or more for larger units.
For the test to be fully comprehensive, more than the triggering action needs to be tested.
The forward breakover voltage limit of the SCR could be tested by increasing the DC
voltage supply (with no pushbuttons actuated) until the SCR latches all on its own. Beware
that a breakover test may require very high voltage: many power SCRs have breakover
voltage ratings of 600 volts or more! Also, if a pulse voltage generator is available, the
critical rate of voltage rise for the SCR could be tested in the same way: subject it to pulsing
supply voltages of different V/time rates with no pushbutton switches actuated and see
when it latches.
In this simple form, the SCR test circuit could suffice as a start/stop control circuit for a DC
motor, lamp, or other practical load: (Figure below)
Gate connected directly to anode through a diode; nearly complete half-wave current
through load.
We can delay the triggering of the SCR, however, by inserting some resistance into the gate
circuit, thus increasing the amount of voltage drop required before enough gate current
triggers the SCR. In other words, if we make it harder for electrons to flow through the gate
by adding a resistance, the AC voltage will have to reach a higher point in its cycle before
there will be enough gate current to turn the SCR on. The result is in Figure below.
Resistance inserted in gate circuit; less than half-wave current through load.
With the half-sine wave chopped up to a greater degree by delayed triggering of the SCR,
the load receives less average power (power is delivered for less time throughout a cycle).
By making the series gate resistor variable, we can make adjustments to the timeproportioned power: (Figure below)
Increasing the resistance raises the threshold level, causing less power to be delivered to
the load. Decreasing the resistance lowers the threshold level, causing more power to be
delivered to the load.
Unfortunately, this control scheme has a significant limitation. In using the AC source
waveform for our SCR triggering signal, we limit control to the first half of the waveform's
half-cycle. In other words, it is not possible for us to wait until after the wave's peak to trigger
the SCR. This means we can turn down the power only to the point where the SCR turns on
at the very peak of the wave: (Figure below)
In any bridge rectifier circuit, the rectifying diodes (in this example, the rectifying SCRs)
must conduct in opposite pairs. SCR1 and SCR3 must be fired simultaneously, and SCR2 and
SCR4 must be fired together as a pair. As you will notice, though, these pairs of SCRs do not
share the same cathode connections, meaning that it would not work to simply parallel their
respective gate connections and connect a single voltage source to trigger both:
(Figure below)
This strategy will not work for triggering SCR2 and SCR4 as a pair.
Although the triggering voltage source shown will trigger SCR4, it will not trigger
SCR2 properly because the two thyristors do not share a common cathode connection to
reference that triggering voltage. Pulse transformers connecting the two thyristor gates to a
common triggering voltage source will work, however: (Figure below)
Controlled bridge rectifiers are not limited to single-phase designs. In most industrial control
systems, AC power is available in three-phase form for maximum efficiency, and solid-state
control circuits are built to take advantage of that. A three-phase controlled rectifier circuit
built with SCRs, without pulse transformers or triggering circuitry shown, would look like
Figure below.
REVIEW:
A Silicon-Controlled Rectifier, or SCR, is essentially a Shockley diode with an extra
terminal added. This extra terminal is called the gate, and it is used to trigger the
device into conduction (latch it) by the application of a small voltage.
To trigger, or fire, an SCR, voltage must be applied between the gate and cathode,
positive to the gate and negative to the cathode. When testing an SCR, a momentary
connection between the gate and anode is sufficient in polarity, intensity, and
duration to trigger it.
SCRs may be fired by intentional triggering of the gate terminal, excessive voltage
(breakdown) between anode and cathode, or excessive rate of voltage rise between
anode and cathode. SCRs may be turned off by anode current falling below
the holding current value (low-current dropout), or by "reverse-firing" the gate
(applying a negative voltage to the gate). Reverse-firing is only sometimes effective,
and always involves high gate current.
SCR terminals may be identified by a continuity meter: the only two terminals
showing any continuity between them at all should be the gate and cathode. Gate
and cathode terminals connect to a PN junction inside the SCR, so a continuity
meter should obtain a diode-like reading between these two terminals with the red
(+) lead on the gate and the black (-) lead on the cathode. Beware, though, that
some large SCRs have an internal resistor connected between gate and cathode,
which will affect any continuity readings taken by a meter.
SCRs are true rectifiers: they only allow current through them in one direction. This
means they cannot be used alone for full-wave AC power control.
If the diodes in a rectifier circuit are replaced by SCRs, you have the makings of
a controlled rectifier circuit, whereby DC power to a load may be time-proportioned
by triggering the SCRs at different points along the AC power waveform.
Circuit Diagram
Procedure
CRO Settings
Experiment Steps
The connections are made as per the circuit diagram given above.
The R Load must be 60W bulb.
Turn on the SW2 and observe the waveform across between G1&K1
Measure the X-axis time interval of ON time of Load Voltage and OFF
Time of Load Voltage.
Adjust the value of Firing angle and note down the load voltage.
Repeat the experiment for different values of and note down Vo.
Tabulation
S.NO
1
2
3
4
5
SCR
Off time (ms)
4
Alpha( in Degree)
72
Vo(Volts)
Model Graph