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Application, types and characteristics of resistors. Simple DC circuits


Applications of resistors In general, a resistor is used to create a known voltage-to-current ratio in an electric circuit. If the current in a circuit is known, then a resistor can be used to create a known potential difference proportional to that current. Conversely, if the potential difference between two points in a circuit is known, a resistor can be used to create a known current proportional to that difference. Current-limiting. By placing a resistor in series with another component, such as a lightemitting diode, the current through that component is reduced to a known safe value. An attenuator is a network of two or more resistors (a voltage divider) used to reduce the voltage of a signal. All resistors dissipate heat. This is the principle behind electric heaters. A resistor has a maximum working voltage and current above which the resistance may change (drastically, in some cases) or the resistor may be physically damaged (overheat or burn up, for instance). Most resistors are rated with a maximum power which is determined by the physical size. Common power ratings for carbon composition and metal-film resistors are 1/8 watt, 1/4 watt, and 1/2 watt. Metal-film and carbon film resistors are more stable than carbon resistors against temperature changes and age. Larger resistors are able to dissipate more heat because of their larger surface area. Wire-wound and resistors embedded in sand (ceramic) are used when a high power rating is required. Fuses A fuse (fusable link) is a type of over-current protection device. It has as its critical component a metal wire or strip that will melt when heated by a prescribed (design) current, opening the circuit of which it is a part, thereby protecting the circuit from an over-current condition. Fuses are often characterized as "fast-blow" or "slow-blow" | "time-delay", according to the time they take to respond to an over-current condition. Types of resistor Fixed resistors Some resistors are cylindrical, with the actual resistive material in the centre (composition resistors), or on the surface of the cylinder (film) resistors, and a conducting metal lead projecting along the axis of the cylinder at each end(axial lead). There are carbon film and metal film resistors. The on the left shows a row of common resistors. Power resistors come in larger packages designed to dissipate heat efficiently. At high power levels, resistors tend to be wire wound types. Resistors used in computers and other devices are typically much smaller, often in surface-mount packages without wire leads. Resistors are built into integrated circuits as part of the fabrication process, using the semiconductor as the resistor.

2 Variable resistors The variable resistor is a resistor whose value can be adjusted by turning a shaft or sliding a control. These are also called potentiometers or rheostats and allow the resistance of the device to be altered by hand. Variable resistors can be inexpensive single-turn types or multiturn types with a helical element. Some variable resistors can be fitted with a mechanical display to count the turns. Other types of resistors A metal oxide varistor (MOV) is a special type of resistor that changes its resistance with rise in voltage: a very high resistance at low voltage (below the trigger voltage) and very low resistance at high voltage (above the trigger voltage). It acts as a switch. It is usually used for short circuit protection in power strips or lightning bolt "arrestors" on street power poles, or as a "snubber" in inductive circuits. A thermistor is a temperature-dependent resistor. There are two kinds, classified according to the sign of their temperature coefficients: A Positive Temperature Coefficient (PTC) resistor is a resistor with a positive temperature coefficient. When the temperature rises the resistance of the PTC increases. PTCs are often found in televisions in series with the demagnetizing coil where they are used to provide a short-duration current burst through the coil when the TV is turned on. One specialized version of a PTC is the polyswitch which acts as a self-repairing fuse. A Negative Temperature Coefficient (NTC) resistor is also a temperature-dependent resistor, but with a negative temperature coefficient. When the temperature rises the resistance of the NTC drops. NTCs are often used in simple temperature detectors and measuring instruments. A sensistor is a semicondutor-based resistor with a negative temperature coefficient, useful in compensating for temperature-induced effects in electronic circuits. Light-sensitive resistors change their resistance when exposed to light. They are used to measure light intensity. Identifying resistors Most axial resistors use a pattern of coloured stripes to indicate resistance. SMT ones follow a numerical pattern. 4-band axial resistors 4 band identification is the most commonly used colour coding scheme on all resistors. It consists of four coloured bands that are painted around the body of the resistor. The first two numbers are the first two significant digits of the resistance value, the third is a multiplier, and the fourth is the tolerance of the value. Each colour corresponds to a certain number, shown in the chart below. The tolerance for a 4-band resistor will be 2%, 5%, or 10%. 5-band resistors

3 More precise value resistors are available with 0.05%, 0.1%, 0.25% , 0.5% and 1% tolerance. They are denoted with 5 strips, the fifth one is the temperature coefficient.

The Standard EIA Colour Code Table per EIA-RS-279 is as follows: Colour Black Brown Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Violet Gray White Gold Silver None 1st band 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 2nd band 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3rd band (multiplier) 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 0.1 0.01 4th band (tolerance) Temp. Coefficient 1% (F) 2% (G) 100 ppm 50 ppm 15 ppm 25 ppm

0.5% (D) 0.25% (C) 0.1% (B) 0.05% (A) 5% (J) 10% (K) 20% (M)

SMT resistors Surface-mount resistors are printed with numerical values in a code related to that used on axial resistors. Standard-tolerance SMT resistors are marked with a three-digit code, in which the first two digits are the first two significant digits of the value and the third digit is the power of ten. For example, "472" represents "47" (the first two digits) multiplied by ten to the power "2" (the third digit), i.e. . Precision SMT resistors are marked with a four-digit code in which the first three digits are the first three significant digits of the value and the fourth digit is the power of ten.

Simple DC circuits Current limiting and regulation E=24 V R = 50 . We want to limit the current to I Imax = 0.1 A and change it with the variable resistor Rv. The maximum value of the variable resistor is (a potentiometer) is 50 . Calculate the resistance of the current-limiting resistor RL. What is the range the current can be set? (RL=190 ., Imin =24/290=0.083 A : 0.1 A I 0.083 A )

4 Matching the load to the internal resistance of the source to get maximum power Assume we have a voltage source of emf and internal resistance Ri . What should be the resistance of the load to get maximum power?

2R P= P = I R, I = Ri + R ( Ri + R ) 2
2

P has its maximum value when dP/dR=0


2 dP 2 ( Ri + R ) 2 R ( Ri + R ) = =0 2 4 Pmax = dR ( Ri + R ) 4R

R = Ri

We get maximum power on a load of resistance equal to the internal resistance of the source. Single-loop circuit. How much current flows in the circuit and in what direction and what is the potential of each points with respect the point O ? We connect the common input of a digital voltmeter to E, and the V input to B. What voltage is shown?

1 = 15 V 2 = 13 V R1 = 100 R2 = 200 R3 = 400

First we assign a hypothetical current i to the loop shown by an arrow and go round the circuit in the direction of the arrow. According to Ohms law, the drop of the potential across a resistor R is RI. A connecting wire has zero resistance, so U(A) =U(O) = 0. The potential drop across R1 is 100i, so U(B)=-100i. We go from point B to C, these points are at the terminals of the first battery, and the potential rises by 15 V. U(C)=-100i+15. The potential drops across R2 by 200i, so U(D)=-100i+15-200i. The potential drops again across R3. UE = -100i+15-200i-400i. The potential rises across the second battery by 13 V. U(O) =-100i+15-200i-400i.+13. We arrived back to point O, to zero potential, so

100i + 15 200i 400i + 13 = 0 700i = 28 i = 0.04 A

5 I=0.4 A current flows in the direction noted by the arrow. Knowing the current, we get the potentials: U(A)=0, U(B)=--4 V, U(C)=-4+15=11 V, U(D)=11-8=3 V, U(E)=3-16=-13 V, U(O)-13+13 = 0 V We connect the common input of a digital voltmeter to E, and the V input to B. What voltage is shown? The voltmeter reads the potential difference between its V input with respect to the com Input. So the voltage shown is V=UB-UE= -4 (-13) = 9 V. The loop method to solve circuits containing two or more loops Determine the currents flowing across each resistor in the circuit shown in the picture. What is the potential of point A with respect to O?

1 = 50 V 2 = 400 V 3 = 290 V R1 = 500 R2 = 200 R3 = 100 R4 = 300 First we assign a current direction to the loops in the circuit. In a branch, which belongs two loops, the difference of the loop current will flow. In this way, Kirchhoffs first law automatically fulfils. At A, for example, i1 current enters from the left, i2 flows out to the right, and (i1-i2) flows out downward. The net current is i1-(i1-i2)-i2 = 0 Starting from a point of a loop we add up all the potential differences along the loop resulting in zero when we reach back. Along the left loop, starting from O, the potential drops on R1 by R1i1, then drops again by 3 across the battery, then drops again by R3(i1-i2) across R3.

2 R1i1 + ( 3 ) R2 (i1 i2 ) = 0
We get the equation for the right loop on the same way, starting form O, following the arrow and adding up the changes of the potential:

R2 (i2 i1 ) + 3 1 R3i2 R4i2 = 0


Arranging the equations, we get

( R1 + R2 )i1 + R2i2 = 2 + 3 R2 i1 ( R2 + R3 + R4 )i2 = 1 3

Plugging in the data:

-700 i1+200 i2 = -110 200i1-600 i2 240 The solution is i1=0.3 A, i2 = 0,5 A. Currents: through R1 : 0.3 A, from left to right, in the direction shown by the arrow through R2 : 0.3 A, 0.3 A downward and 0.5 A upward, the net current is 0,2 A upward., through R3 and R4: 0.5 A in the direction of the arrow. The change of the potential from O to A is R2 0.2 A +290 = 250 V. VAO = 250 V.

The voltage divider The emf of the source is = 24 V. How do we ensure VAB=10 V?

V AB = IR2 =

R2 = R1 + R2 1 + R1 / R2

The ratio of the resistors has to be R1/R2 = 1.4 The voltage VAB can be regulated continuously between 0 and by a potentiometer. The potentiometer is also used to measure voltage or detect slight change of voltage in compensator circuits. A Pogendorf Compensator is shown in the picture below. Poggendorf Compensator A very sensitive galvanometer G detects if there is current flowing in the bottom circuit. The current can be zero if the voltage VS0 is he same as the unknown emf, x. If the current IG = 0 the total current Ip flows through the helical potentiometer RH, and VSO=IpR. Ip depends only on the resistance of the potentiometer and both on the emf and internal resistance of the source. A helical potentiometer is equipped with a 1000- division scale from where the position of the sliding contact can be read, and R=n/1000 RH . Let be the sliding contact at the division nx. We replace the voltage source with a standard cell of accurately know emf, 0, and set the sliding contact for zero current again. Let it be n0.

nx RH I p nx 1000 0 x = n0 n0 0 = RH I p 1000

x =

The Wheatstone Bridge is used to measure resistance by comparing an unknown resistance with a standard one. It is also used to detect slight variation of resistance. If the galvanometer reads zero the same current I1 flows through both resistors R1 and R2 and again the same current I2 flows through R3 and R4. Moreover, the voltage across the galvanometer is zero, so A and B are at the same potential. This means for the voltages, VAO and VBO and VCA and VCB that VAO = VBO and VBO = VCB. But these voltages are proportional to the current across the resistors, VAO = I1R1 and VBO = I2R3 I1R1=I2R3. A similar equation holds for the other pair of resistors R2 and R4: I1R2=I2R4. Dividing the equations by each other we get the condition of bridge balance:
R1 R3 = R2 R4

If one pair of resistors (R3,R4) are fixed, and their ratio is accurately known, and one of the other two resistors (say R2) is a variable resistor Rv (a rheostat) we can determine the unlknow resistance R1 from the value Rv set for balance: R1 = Rv

R3 . R4

Application of Thevenins Theorem for the Wheatstone Bridge Use Thevenins theorem to calculate the current reading of the galvanometer in terms of Rx near balance in the Wheatstone-Bridge in the figure. The galvanometer has got the internal resistance RG and the battery can be considered an ideal voltage source with zero internal resistance. First we determine the Thevenin equivalent emf and internal resistance of the two-pole AB, with the galvanometer removed. Assuming the potential zero at O,

UA =

R x R1 , UB = , so the open-circuit R1 + R2 Rx + Rv

voltage is

R1 Rx = T V AB = U A U B = R +R Rx + Rv 2 1

When the Bridge is balanced, T = 0, and this holds when

R1 Rx = R2 Rv

The internal resistance of the Thevenin-equivalent voltage source is obtained as the resultant resistance RAB when the battery is replaced with a short. We have the resistors Rx and Rv connected in parallel then, and so are R1 and R2. The parallel resultants are connected in series. The internal resistance is then

RT =

R R R1R2 + x v . R1 + R2 Rx + Rv

Connecting the galvanometer between A and B, the current flowing through it is

IG =

T . RT + RG

Measuring temperature with a resistance thermometer using a Wheatstone Bridge Assume that Rx is a platinum resistance thermometer of resistance Ro =100 at T0 = 0C and temperature coefficient = 0.00386/C . The resistance changes with the temperature as R(T)=R0(!+T). The bridge is balanced with the variable resistor Rv at 0 C. When the resistance thermometer warms up, its resistance changes by r. A high-resistance voltmeter is connected between points A and B. Derive a formula to get the temperature from the voltage reading. Use linear approximation. Assume that R1=R2 and =12 V.

R1 Rx . From the previous problem, V AB = R +R Rx + Rv 2 1


It is zero at balance, when Rx = R0

R1 R0 = Rv = R0 R2 Rv

r ( R0 + Rv ) r R0 r Rv = ( R0 + Rv ) 2 ( R0 + Rv ) 2 r r V = T so T = 4 AB . Near balance: V AB , but 4R0 R0 V AB

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