* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Introduction - facstaff.bucknell.edu
Immunity-aware programming wikipedia , lookup
Three-phase electric power wikipedia , lookup
Spark-gap transmitter wikipedia , lookup
Electrical ballast wikipedia , lookup
Electrical substation wikipedia , lookup
Variable-frequency drive wikipedia , lookup
History of electric power transmission wikipedia , lookup
Pulse-width modulation wikipedia , lookup
Oscilloscope history wikipedia , lookup
Distribution management system wikipedia , lookup
Power inverter wikipedia , lookup
Current source wikipedia , lookup
Power MOSFET wikipedia , lookup
Integrating ADC wikipedia , lookup
Surge protector wikipedia , lookup
Resistive opto-isolator wikipedia , lookup
Alternating current wikipedia , lookup
Stray voltage wikipedia , lookup
Power electronics wikipedia , lookup
Schmitt trigger wikipedia , lookup
Voltage regulator wikipedia , lookup
Current mirror wikipedia , lookup
Voltage optimisation wikipedia , lookup
Buck converter wikipedia , lookup
Switched-mode power supply wikipedia , lookup
ELEC 350L Electronics I Laboratory Fall 2005 Lab #5: Relaxation Oscillator (Astable Multivibrator) Introduction Many electronic devices and systems require a source of pulses, often called a “clock signal,” for proper operation. One example is the clock circuit found in all computers that controls the timing of the digital signals within the CPU. Another is the signal generator on your lab bench. The waveform most often required in a large number of applications is the square wave. Sometimes a nonsymmetrical square wave, also called a rectangular wave, is required. There are many ways to generate square waves, but if a high-quality signal source is not required, one of the easiest and least expensive approaches is to use an op-amp. In this lab experiment you will build a type of square wave generator circuit known as a relaxation oscillator (also called an astable multivibrator). Theory of Operation A common square wave generator circuit based on an op-amp is shown in Figure 1. One of the first things you might notice about this circuit is that it has no input port other than the connections to the power supply. Rather than serving as processors of signals (like amplifiers and filters, which have inputs and outputs), oscillators instead are sources of signals (which have only outputs). Note that there are resistors (R2 and R3) connected from the output port of the opamp to both its inverting and noninverting terminals. The design is unusual in that it incorporates both positive and negative feedback. The positive feedback dominates, primarily because the capacitor voltage cannot change instantaneously, whereas the voltage at the junction of the voltage divider formed by R1 and R2 can. Thus, a virtual short cannot be assumed to exist between the two input terminals. We will see that the circuit behaves cyclically, switching regularly between two unstable output states (hence the name astable multivibrator; multivibrator is another name for oscillator). R3 C + vc − +15 V − vo + −15 V R2 R1 Figure 1. Relaxation oscillator. 1 Because of the positive feedback, the output of the op-amp will be near either the positive power supply voltage VPOS (+ 15 V in Figure 1) or the negative supply voltage VNEG (–15 V). The reference voltage at the noninverting input will be VPOS or VNEG, where R2 . R1 R2 For example, if R1 and R2 are equal in value, the reference voltage will be 0.5VPOS. Thus, the state of the output (vo = VPOS or VNEG) will depend upon the value of the capacitor voltage vc (which is the same as v−) compared to the voltage at the junction of the voltage divider (v+). The capacitor charges through resistor R3 with a time constant of R3C because no current flows into the inverting input of the op-amp. The capacitor voltage vc would eventually reach VPOS or VNEG if the circuit did not react to the change in vc before then. Consider what happens when vo is saturated at VPOS. The voltage at the noninverting input (v+) is VPOS. The output voltage charges the capacitor through resistor R3. The capacitor voltage becomes more positive, rising toward the value VPOS. However, the capacitor voltage never rises that far, because the output voltage changes abruptly to VNEG when vc just goes over the value VPOS. In response, the current through R3 changes direction, and vc drops as the capacitor charges toward the new negative output voltage VNEG. (Voltage vc starts at the positive value VPOS, drops through zero, and then grows more negative.) But once vc reaches the value VNEG, the output voltage changes state again back to VPOS. The capacitor voltage rises again, becoming less negative and then more positive, and the cycle repeats. The output voltage cycles between VPOS and VNEG as long as power is applied to the circuit. The capacitor alternately charges, discharges, and charges again with the time constant R3C. Figure 2 shows a plot of the output voltage vo and the capacitor voltage vc vs. time. The figure illustrates why the circuit is sometimes called a relaxation oscillator; the capacitor voltage tries to “relax” to a steady-state value after every transition in the output voltage. The circuit is also V POS V POS 0 t V NEG V NEG T/2 T Figure 2. Output voltage vo (solid line) and capacitor voltage vc (dashed line) produced by the relaxation oscillator. The capacitor voltage does not actually go above VPOS or below VNEG. The dashed lines are extended to illustrate the exponential behavior of vc. 2 called an astable multivibrator because the output continuously alternates between two states, each of which is initially stable but then becomes unstable when the capacitor voltage approaches the reference voltage v+. The term multivibrator is just another name for an oscillator, specifically one that generates pulses. The period T of the square wave is controlled by the values of R3, C, and . A formula for T can be derived from the equation that gives the voltage across the capacitor. When the output voltage is at the value VPOS, the time-varying capacitor voltage is given by v c (t ) VPOS VNEG VPOS e t / R3C , where t is measured from the instant the output voltage made its most recent transition from VNEG to VPOS. Note that at t = 0 in this case the capacitor voltage is VNEG, the value of vc that causes the output to switch from VNEG to VPOS. As t , vc would reach the value VPOS; however, it never gets there before the output changes state again. During the other half-cycle, when the output voltage is VNEG, the capacitor voltage is v c (t ) VNEG ( VPOS VNEG ) e t / R3C , where again t measures the time that has passed since the most recent output transition. If we make the assumption that VNEG = –VPOS (that is, that the power supply voltages are equal in magnitude and opposite in sign), then the equations for vc become when vo VPOS when vo VNEG . v c (t ) VPOS 1 1 e t / R3C and vc (t ) VNEG 1 1e t / R3C Note from Figure 2 that the output voltage spends equal amounts of time in the positive state and in the negative state. We can therefore use either equation for the capacitor voltage to find the period T of the square wave. We’ll use the first one (valid when the output is positive). The output voltage remains positive until the capacitor voltage rises to VPOS. At that instant in time the output switches to VNEG, and the capacitor voltage begins to drop again. Thus, vc (0.5T ) VPOS because the output voltage changes state after only half a period. Substituting this “end condition” (as opposed to an “initial condition”) into the expression for the timevarying capacitor voltage with t = 0.5T yields v c (0.5T ) VPOS VPOS 1 1 e 0.5T / R3C . In the right-hand equality the VPOS factors cancel out, leaving 1 1 e 0.5T / R C , 3 or 1 e 0.5T / R3C . 1 3 Taking the natural logarithm of both sides leads to the formula for the period of the square wave, 1 T 2 R3C ln , 1 which can also be written 1 T 2 R3C ln . 1 We would have obtained the same result if we had started with the equation for the capacitor voltage for the case when the output voltage is negative. Quite often the resistors R1 and R2 are chosen to be equal, which sets = 0.5 and results in a simplified equation for the period given by T 2.2 R3C for 0.5 , because 1 0.5 2 ln 2.2 . 1 0.5 Experimental Procedure Assemble a relaxation oscillator like the one shown in Figure 1. Use power supply voltages of ±15 V, and make the resistors in the positive feedback network (R1 and R2) equal in value. Choose reasonable values for R1 and R2 based upon your experience with op-amps and the requirement to limit the output current of the op-amp. Add the circuit shown in Figure 3 to the output of the op-amp. The devices D1 and D2 are called light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Like regular diodes, LEDs conduct in one direction only. Since the LEDs shown in Figure 3 are oriented in opposite directions, one LED should light when the output of the op-amp is positive, and the other should light when the output is negative. The LEDs used in this lab glow well when they draw around 20 mA. Interestingly, an LED has a steady 1-V drop across it when it conducts current. Assuming that the opamp’s output voltage saturates at around 14 V, and knowing that the drop across an LED is 1 V when it is on, find an appropriate value for the LED current-limiting resistor R4. R4 to vo D1 D2 Figure 3. Light-emitting diodes used to indicate output voltage polarity. 4 Using the parts available to you, select reasonable values for C and R3 to produce a square wave with a period of approximately 0.5 sec. This period is long enough to allow you to see the two LEDs blinking alternately when you apply power to the circuit. Assemble the circuit, including the output indicator shown in Figure 3, and apply power to it. Devise a method to estimate the period (or frequency) of the square wave without using the oscilloscope or any other piece of bench-top test equipment, and use this method to verify that your circuit is working properly. Be sure to record the details of your measurement method in your notebook. Increase the oscillation frequency by changing the capacitor value to 0.001 F. Calculate the new frequency, and verify your calculation by displaying the output waveform on the oscilloscope. Measure the length of one period of the square wave, and make sure it corresponds to the frequency you measured. Now display the capacitor voltage and the output voltage together using the same scale, making sure that both waveforms have the same 0-V reference. Sketch or print out the display, and measure the oscillation frequency again. Give a valid explanation for the change in the operation of the circuit. (Hint: The coaxial oscilloscope leads are in parallel with the capacitor.) Decrease the time/division setting of the oscilloscope so that the slope of the output voltage transition from positive to negative (or negative to positive) is exaggerated on the display. Calculate the time rate of change of the voltage during the transition. How does this result relate to the slew rate specification of the op-amp? 5