E.D Lab Report 2
E.D Lab Report 2
Faculty of Engineering
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2 MD.SUMON 20-42556-1
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Title: Study of Diode Rectifiers
Abstract:
The objective of experiment 2 of the Electronic Devices Lab is now we have learned about the applications of
diode. Firstly, we were introduced that one of the main components used in making of rectifier circuit are diode
and there are three types of rectifier circuit.
Introduction:
A diode is a two-terminal electronic component that conducts current primarily in one direction. It has low
resistance in one direction, and high resistance in the other. A diode rectifies an ac voltage, so that it can be
smoothed and converted into a dc voltage. A rectifier, however, can produce a constant or variable DC voltage.
A diode rectifier can produce a fixed DC voltage whereas an SCR can produce a variable DC voltage.
A rectifier, however, cannot produce a smooth DC voltage. So the rectification block that makes the output DC voltage
a smooth one follows a filter circuit. In this case, the capacitor acts as a smoothing filter so that the output is nearly a dc
voltage. A filtering is not perfect; there will be a remaining voltage fluctuation known as ripple, on the output voltage.
The half-wave voltage signal is normally established by a network with a single diode has an average or equivalent DC
voltage level equal to 31.8% of the peak voltage, whereas the full-wave rectified signal has twice the average or DC
level of the half-wave signal, or 63.6% of the peak value.
During positive half cycle of the input voltage anode of the diode is positive compared with the cathode. Diode
is in forward bias and current passes through the diode and positive cycle develops across the load resistance
RL. During negative half cycle of input voltage, anode is negative with respected to cathode and diode is in
reverse bias. No current passes through the diode hence output voltage is zero.
Figure: During positive half-cycle of the input, D1 and D2 are forward-biased and conduct current. D3 and D4 are reverse-biased
Figure: During negative half-cycle of the input, D3 and D4 are forward-biased and conduct current. D1 and D2 are reverse-biased
For a positive half cycle of the input voltage, the polarities of the secondary voltages are shown in figure. This condition
forward biases diode D1 and reverse biases diode D2.The current path is through D1 and the load resistor RL.
For a negative half cycle of the input voltage, the voltage polarities on the secondary are shown. This condition reverse
biases D1 and forward biases D2. The current path is through D2 and RL. Because the output current during both the
positive and negative portions of the input cycle are in the same direction through the load the output voltage developed
across the load resistor is a full wave rectified dc voltage.
Figure: During negative half-cycle of the input, D2 is forward-biased and D1 is reverse-biased.
Apparatus:
1 Diode 4
2 10 k Resistance 1
3 Project Board 1
4 Oscilloscope 1
5 Multimeter 1
6 Transformer 1
220V/12V/9V/6V
7 47μF Capacitor 1
8 100μF Capacitor 1
9 Chord 2
Circuit Diagram:
Figure 4: Half wave rectifier
Discussion:
The value of the output voltages that are obtained through oscilloscope and through the multimeter with
different values of capacitance were of less variation and were comparable. The overall result of simulated
and calculated is different. In the experimented data the function error from oscilloscope, AC and DC voltage
source and even diode placement can make difference in the result. On the other hand, the simulated result
is more accurate as there was no functional error or any other thing.
ANS:
A Filter Capacitor is a capacitor that is used to filter out a certain frequency otherwise series of
frequencies from an electronic circuit is known as the filter capacitor. Generally, a capacitor filters out the
signals which have a low frequency. The frequency value of these signals is near to 0Hz, these are also known
as DC signals. So, this capacitor is used to filter unwanted frequencies. These are very common in different
types of equipment like electronics as well as electrical and applicable in different applications.
*Why circuit 2 is better than the circuit in figure 3?
ANS:
The circuit 2 is better just because, A bridge rectifier does not require a bulky center tapped
transformer, nowadays the center tapped transformers are costlier than diodes and a step-down transformer
hence reduced size and cost.
Conclusion:
From this lab we know how to build a half wave rectifier circuit. For building we must choose a diode that
can safely withstand the current the circuit will have to provide, and also the reverse bias voltage that will be
applied to it. Diodes are rated for maximum average forward current, which, since the diode conducts only
half the time (positive-going half-cycles only), is roughly 1/2(Vav/RL), where Vav is the average voltage
and RL is the load resistance. The peak inverse voltage (PIV), or maximum repetitive reverse voltage
(VRRM) is the maximum reverse bias that the diode can withstand. For the unfiltered rectifier, this is just
the peak voltage. The half-wave rectifier is used most often in low-power applications because of their major
disadvantages being. The output amplitude is less than the input amplitude, there is no output during the
negative half cycle so half the power is wasted and the output is pulsed DC resulting in excessive ripple. By
performing this experiment, we know all this stuff.
Reference(s):
[1] Adel S. Sedra, Kennth C. Smith, “Microelectronic Circuits”, Saunders College
Publishing, 3rd ed., ISBN: 0-03-051648-X, 1991.
[2] David J. Comer, Donald T. Comer, Fundamentals of Electronic Circuit Design, John
Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.; ISBN: 0471410160, 2002.
[3] American International University–Bangladesh (AIUB) Electronic Devices Lab Manual.