Lab 2 - Diode Characteristics
Lab 2 - Diode Characteristics
LAB 2
DIODE CHARACTERISTICS
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I. OBJECTIVES
In this laboratory, you will be introduced the use of breadboard, the equipment used in this laboratory. You will also learn the behavior of diodes and rectifier circuits using diodes.
B. Components
1. Resistors: 1K 2. Capacitors: 1uF 3. Diode: 1N4148, Zener 5V1
C. Equipment
1. Function Generator 2. Oscilloscope 3. Digital Multi-meter 4. DC source
2. For this diode, determine the incremental resistance (rd) at ID = 0.1, 1 and 10 mA. 3. If this diode were used in the following circuit, and the +10V supply voltage varied by 10%, how much would the output voltage vary?
IV. PROCEDURE
A. 1N4148 Diode
Build the following diode circuit:
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1. Measure the diode voltage VD as the power supply is varied from 0 to 10V using the steps given in Table 1. Table 1. Measurement results for simple diode circuit.
For each of the voltage steps above, determine the diode current ID by measuring the voltage drop across the 1 k resistor. Since the value of the resistor is known, the current flowing through the resistor can easily be calculated. 2. Plot the IV characteristics of the diode. 3. Draw a tangent line to the curve at around ID = 3mA and determine the incremental resistance of the diode at this point.
rd = Chang in VD Chang in I D
4. Compare this value of resistance to the calculated value of r = nVT/ID (with n = 2, VT =26mV and ID = 3mA). How do these values compare?
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5. Set the power supply to 10 volts and then vary the supply voltage by 20%. Record the diode voltages, VDmin and VDmax at both points. 6. Determine the Line Regulation of the diode circuit
Express the results in [mV/V]. 7. Set the supply voltage back to its nominal value. Add a 1k load across the diode. Measure the drop in output voltage. Determine the load regulation
. Express the results in [mV/mA]. Remember in the first case there is no load, and no load current. By adding the resistor you have added a load to the diode circuit. You can easily determine the load current if you know the voltage drop across the load resistor. What is the function of the resistor in this circuit? How much current would have to flow through the diode if there was no resistor between the diode and the voltage source?
B. Zener Diode
Replace the diode in the previous circuit with a Zener diode:
Figure 3
1. Using the same technique used earlier, measure the diode voltage and calculate the diode current. Change the voltage source from 0 to 10 volts using the steps from Table 2. Table 2.measurement results for basic Zener diode circuit
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0.8 1 2 3 6 10
What is the difference between this Zener diode and the other diode you measured previously? Can you tell the difference between a normal diode and a Zener diode by looking at such a chart? 2. Continue measuring the circuit, this time apply the negative voltages given in Table 3 and record the results. Table 3.Measurement results for basic Zener diode circuit (continued)
What can be said about the Zener voltage for this particular Zener diode? 3. Using both charts, plot the complete IV terminal characteristics for the Zener diode.
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1. Use the function generator to set up the signal source vs. Use the sine wave at 1000Hz with a peak amplitude of 4 volts. 2. Use the oscilloscope to display both the input and the output at the same time. Sketch these waveforms. 3. Use a DC voltmeter to record the input and output voltages. 4. Set your oscilloscope to X-Y setting. This will display channel 1 (input) on the X-axis and channel 2 (output) on the Y-axis. This will display the transfer characteristic of your circuit. Sketch the transfer characteristic you observe and comment.
Figure 4.1: Half wave Rectifier {Sedra and Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, 5th edition}
D. Full-Wave Rectifier
A more commonly used circuit is the bridge rectifier. Build the bridge rectifier shown in Figure 5.
1. Use a sinusoidal input voltage at 1000 Hz with an amplitude of 10 volts. Measure and sketch the input and output of the circuit using the oscilloscope (in normal time measurement, not X-Y mode).
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To measure the output voltage Vout connect channel-1 of the oscilloscope to the positive end of the resistor (Va). Connect channel-2 of the oscilloscope to the negative end of the resistor (Vb) while connecting the common ends of both channels to Vref. Display both channels and select add mode on the oscilloscope. This will give you Va + Vb. Use the Invert Channel2 option to get Va Vb which is equivalent to Vout. 2. Now add a capacitor 1F parallel to the output as shown in Figure 6. (Be careful with the polarity of the capacitor), sketch the new output. Explain in detail how the capacitor works in the circuit
Figure 7: Full wave Rectifier {Sedra and Smith, Microelectronic Circuits, 5th edition}
In most of applications, a transformer is used to scale the input voltage. To build a power supply, for example, the 220V AC signal would be reduced to 10V AC signal using a transformer. The output of the transformer would be a sinusoidal signal with 10V peak amplitude, which is just like the one generated by the function generator in this lab.
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