Introduction To Basic Electronics
Introduction To Basic Electronics
Introduction To Basic Electronics
to Basic Electronics
Instructor:
Gideon Adom-Bamfi
Email:
gidabs@yahoo.com
General Information
• Suggested pre-requisites:
▫ Basic course on applied electricity and linear algebra,
Knowledge of electrical components will be an advantage.
• Course Content:
▫ Introduction to Electronics and its Applications
▫ Semiconductor Materials and Properties
▫ Semiconductor Diodes
▫ Semiconductor Diodes and Applications
▫ Bipolar Junction Transistor
▫ Transistor as an Amplifier
▫ Operational Amplifier
▫ Switching Theory and Logic Design
• Grading :
▫ Midterm I: 30% Final Exams 70%
Reference Books
• Electronic Principles by Albert Pual Malvino
(copies can be found in both Engineering and
Main Lib.)
• Electronic Engineering by Sanjay Sharma PhD.
(copies can be found at Kingdom Books)
• etc
Semesters’ Plan
Wk Lecture Days
2 Introduction to Electronics and its Applications
14 Operational Amplifier
15 Switching Theory and Logic Design
16 Revision
Intro. to
Electricity and Electronics
What is Electricity
• By connecting a conductor
from the positive terminal to
negative terminal electrons
will flow.
Voltage
• A battery positive terminal (+) and a negative terminal (-). The
difference in charge between each terminal is the potential
energy the battery can provide. This is labeled in units of volts.
Water Analogy
Voltage Sources:
• Voltage is like differential pressure,
always measure between two points.
R1 R2 Rn
Resistors in Circuits
Parallel
• If there is more
than one way for
the current to
complete its path,
the circuit is
parallel
Resistors in Circuits
Parallel
1
R1R2 1 1 1
R1 R2 R1 R2 Rn
Resistors in Circuits
Mixed
• If the path for the
current in a portion
of the circuit is a
Series
single path, and in R
another portion of
the circuit has
Series
Parallel
multiple routes, the
circuit is a mix of
series and parallel.
Capacitance
A capacitor is used to store charge for a short amount of time
Capacitor
Battery
Unit = Farad
▫ Nano n - 10-9
▫ Pico p - 10-12
The Capacitor
Capacitance Value
• Capacitor identification
depends on the capacitor
type.
• Could be color bands,
dots, or numbers.
• Wise to keep capacitors
organized and identified
to prevent a lot of work
trying to re-identify the
values.
Capacitors in Circuits
+
• Two physical factors
affect capacitance Charged plates far
apart
values.
▫ Plate spacing
-
▫ Plate surface area
• In series, plates are
far apart making
capacitance less C1C2
C1 C2
Capacitors in Circuits
• In parallel, the +
C1 C2
capacitance more the
Capacitor
The Inductor
• There are two fundamental principles of
electronics:
1. Moving electrons create a magnetic field.
2. Moving or changing magnetic fields cause
electrons to move.
• An inductor is a coil of wire through which
electrons move, and energy is stored in the
resulting magnetic field.
The Inductor
• Like capacitors,
inductors temporarily
store energy.
• Unlike capacitors:
▫ Inductors store energy
in a magnetic field, not
an electric field.
▫ When the source of
electrons is removed,
the magnetic field
collapses immediately.
The Inductor
• Inductors are simply
coils of wire.
▫ Can be air wound
(nothing in the middle
of the coil)
▫ Can be wound around a
permeable material
(material that
concentrates magnetic
fields)
▫ Can be wound around a
circular form (toroid)
The Inductor
• Inductance is measured in Henry(s).
• A Henry is a measure of the intensity of the
magnetic field that is produced.
• Typical inductor values used in electronics are in
the range of milli Henry (1/1000) and micro
Henry (1/1,000,000)
The Inductor
• The amount of
inductance is
influenced by a
number of factors:
▫ Number of coil
turns.
▫ Diameter of coil.
▫ Spacing between
turns.
▫ Size of the wire
used.
▫ Type of material
inside the coil.
Inductor Performance With DC
Currents
• When DC current is applied to an inductor, the wire in
the inductor momentarily appears as a short circuit and
maximum current flows.
• As the magnetic field builds (changes) there is a
tendency for the current flow to slow down (due to an
opposition caused by the changing magnetic field).
• Finally, the magnetic field is at its maximum and the
current flows to maintain the field.
• As soon as the current source is removed, the magnetic
field begins to collapse and creates a rush of current in
the other direction, sometimes at very high voltages.
Inductor Performance With AC
Currents
• When AC current is applied to an inductor,
during the first half of the cycle, the magnetic
field builds as if it were a DC voltage.
• During the next half of the cycle, the current is
reversed and the magnetic field first has to
decrease the reverse polarity in step with the
changing current.
• Depending on the value of inductance, these
forces can work against each other, making for a
less than simple situation.
The Inductor
• Because the magnetic
field surrounding an
inductor can cut
across another
inductor in close
proximity, the
changing magnetic
field in one can cause
current to flow in the
other … the basis of
transformers
Laws and Principles of
Electricity and Electronics
Laws and Rules
• Ohms
• Kirchhoff’s
• Voltage Divider
• Current Divider
• Thevenin’s
• Norton’s
Ohm’s Law
• In 1827 George Ohm proved there was a direct
relationship between Voltage (E), Current (I),
and Resistance (R) in an electrical circuit. This
relationship is known as Ohm’s Law.
• Ohm’s Law states that current in a circuit is
proportional to the voltage and inversely
proportional to the resistance.
Ohm’s Law
E = Voltage - Volts
I = Current - Amps
R = Resistance or Reactance
(Impedence) - Ohms
Power
• Transforming energy from one form to another
is called work. The greater the energy
transformed, the more work that is done.
• There are six basic forms of energy and they are
light, heat, magnetic, chemical, electrical, and
mechanical energy.
• The unit for measuring work is called the
Joule (J).
Power
• Power (P) is the rate at which work is
performed and is measured by the unit called
Watt (W). Watts = Joules per second.
• The output Power, or power ratings of
electrical, electronic or mechanical devices can
be expressed in Watts (W) and describes the
number of Joules of energy converted every
second.
Power
• Power is the rate at which electric energy (W)
is converted to some other form and can be
expressed mathematically as P = I x V.
• This formula states that the amount of power
delivered to a device is dependent on the
electrical pressure (or voltage applied across the
device) and the current flowing through the
device.
Power Formula
• The Power Formula is the relationship
between Power (P), Voltage (E), and Current (I).
P
P = Power -Watts
E = Voltage - Volts
I = Current - Amps
E I
Power Formula
• The Power Formula states that if the voltage
in a circuit changes, the current in the circuit
also changes. The power required from a circuit
changes any time loads are added (power
increases) or removed (power decreases).
• The Power Formula is used when
troubleshooting and to predict circuit
characteristics before power is applied.
Combining Ohm’s Law and Power
Formula
• Ohm’s Law and the Power Formula may be
combined mathematically and written as any
combination of Voltage (E), Current (I),
Resistance (R), or Power (P).
• Ohm’s Law and the Power Formula are
limited to circuits in which electrical resistance
is the only significant opposition to the flow of
current. This limitation includes all DC circuits
and AC circuits that do no contain a significant
amount of inductance and/or capacitance –
which we will learn about later.
Combining Ohm’s Law and Power
Formula
57
V1 + V2 + V3 + ∙∙∙ + Vn = ET
Voltage Division
R1
v1 R1i vtotal
R1 R2 R3
R2
v2 R2i vtotal
R1 R2 R3
Application of the Voltage-Division
Principle
R1
v1 vtotal
R1 R2 R3 R4
1000
15
1000 1000 2000 6000
1.5V
Current Division
v R2
i1 itotal
R1 R1 R2
v R1
i2 itotal
R2 R1 R2
Application of the Current-Division Principle
R2 R3 30 60
Req 20
R2 R3 30 60
Req 20
i1 is 15 10A
R1 Req 10 20
•Voltage division •Voltage division and
•current division
•Current division
Although they are very
important concepts,
series/parallel equivalents and
the current/voltage division
principles are not sufficient to
solve all circuits.
Thevenin’s Theorem
• Thevenin’s Theorem – any resistive circuit or
network, no matter how complex, can be
represented as a voltage source in series with
a source resistance
Thevenin’s Theorem
• Thevenin Voltage (VTH) – the voltage present
at the output terminals of the circuit when the
load is removed
Vt v oc
voc
Rt
isc
Thévenin Equivalent Circuits
Finding the Thévenin
Resistance Directly