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From Electric to Electronic

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It was the genesis of today's huge electronics industry. Audion, Triode How A Triode Works Apply a like charge to the grid and the flow stops!! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: From Electric to Electronic


1
From Electric to Electronic
  • From the JUs to the Vacuum Tube

2
Electric vs. Electronic
  • Electric circuits are connections of conductive
    wires and other devices whereby the uniform flow
    of electrons occurs.
  • Electronic circuits add a new dimension to
    electric circuits in that some means of control
    is exerted over the flow of electrons by another
    electrical signal, either a voltage or a current.
  • In electronics we are dealing with special
    devices able to control the flow of electrons
    according to another flow of electrons, or by the
    application of a static voltage.
  • In other words, in an electronic circuit,
    electricity is able to control electricity.

3
It all started with the first Ju
4
1st JU
"Ju-Got-Electricity-Ju-Got-Magnetism"
5
Coil them up!
6
2nd JU
"Ju-Got-Magnetisim-Ju-Got-Electricity"
7
Current Induced ONLY when moving!
8
How do you measure Inductance?
  • The ratio of magnetic flux to the current
    producing it.

L F / I
Webers/Amperes
Inductance is measured in Henries
9
3rd JU
Ju-Got Electricity-Ju-Got-Magnetisim-Ju-Got-Elect
ricity"
Joseph Henry (1797-1878) is widely considered the
foremost American scientist of the 19th century.
Henry's early investigations concerned
electromagnetic phenomena, and his discovery of
electromagnetic self-induction in 1831
established his reputation in America. In 1846
Henry was named first Secretary of the
newly-established Smithsonian Institution, a
position he held until his death. In 1868 he was
elected President of the Academy this position,
too, he held until his death.
10
Can you picture it?!
11
Continuing with electronicsUsing electricity to
control electricity.
Thomas Alva Edison (February 11, 1847 October
18, 1931) was an American inventor, scientist and
businessman who developed many devices that
greatly influenced life around the world,
including the phonograph, the motion picture
camera, and a long-lasting, practical electric
light bulb. Dubbed "The Wizard of Menlo Park"
(now Edison, New Jersey) by a newspaper reporter,
he was one of the first inventors to apply the
principles of mass production and large teamwork
to the process of invention, and therefore is
often credited with the creation of the first
industrial research laboratory.
12
The Precursor to the Vacuum Tube
  • Edison and his team were hard at work trying to
  • find a light bulb filament that worked well. He
  • had already settled on a carbonized (burned)
  • bamboo filament, but even this solution was not
  • perfect. After glowing for a few hours, carbon
  • from the filament would be deposited on the
  • inside walls of the bulb, turning it black.
  • His assistant noticed that the carbon seemed to
    be coming from the end of the filament that was
    attached to the power supply, and seemed to be
    flying through the vacuum onto the walls of the
    bulb.
  • Edison determined that not only was carbon flying
    through the vacuum, but that it carried a charge.
    That is, electricity was flowing not only through
    the filament but also through the evacuated bulb.

13
Thermionic Emission
  • The flow of charged particles called thermions
    from a charged metal or a charged metal oxide
    surface, caused by thermal vibration energy
    overcoming the electrostatic forces holding
    electrons to the surface of the atom.

The Edison Effect
14
How to fix the blackened bulbs?
  • Edison tried to draw off the discoloration by
    placing a metal plate and charging it POSITIVE
  • Edison noticed that, with an extra electrode
    connected to the positive end of the filament, a
    small but measurable electric current flowed
    between them. He termed this device an Electrical
    Indicator.
  • While he was proven to be right about the flow,
    Edison could not explain it, and the third
    electrode did not prevent blackening of the bulb,
    so he moved on to other experiments. But he did
    patent the new device, because he believed that
    it might have some commercial applications, such
    as measuring electric current.

15
20 years later
  • Edison Effect in a vacuum tube was waiting to do
    something

16
Side Note - Galvanization
  • Luigi Galvani 1783
  • Italian physicist and physician
  • He was a pioneer in modern obstetrics,
  • and discovered that muscle and nerve cells
  • produce electricity.

17
The Galvanometer
  • Galvanometer is the historical name given to a
    moving coil electric current detector.
  • When a current is passed through a coil in a
    magnetic field, the coil experiences a torque
    proportional to the current.
  • If the coil's movement is opposed by a coil
    spring, then the amount of deflection of a needle
    attached to the coil may be proportional to the
    current passing through the coil.
  • Such "meter movements" were at the heart of the
    moving coil meters such as voltmeters and
    ammeters until they were largely replaced with
    solid state meters.

18
Back to Business Mrs. Houston!
So what about this Galvano-froggy-thingy?
19
Aha!
20
The Fleming Valve
  • Sir John Ambrose Fleming -1904
  • Worked to develop the first rectifier while
    working for the Marconi
  • Company.
  • He was faced with the problem of detecting weak
    wireless signals.
  • He was decided to try inserting one of Edisons
    lamps in
  • an oscillatory circuit containing a
    galvanometer.
  • He had found the solution to the problem of
    rectifying
  • high frequency wireless circuits.
  • Fleming designed a transmitter for to attempt
    transmission of
  • radio waves across the Atlantic from Poldhu,
    England, to
  • Nova Scotia, Canada.
  • The distance between the two points was about
    3,500 kilometres (2,100 miles).

21
The Fleming Valve
  • Allowed electrical current to flow in one
    direction, but not the other.
  • Fleming determined that by changing the position
    of the
  • metal plates around the filament he could vary
    the strength
  • of the current.
  • At the receiving end the radio waves were
    difficult to
  • detect with a galvanometer, but Fleming realized
    that if
  • he could get the current to flow in only one
    direction,
  • the oscillations of the wireless signal could be
    read easily.
  • He did this by adding a positively charged plate
    separate
  • from the filament to the Edison tube.
  • Fleming Valve, Diode Valve, Fleming Diode,
  • Thermionic Valve, Oscillation Valve.
  • It becomes known as a 'vacuum tube' in America

22
How The Fleming Valve Works
A negative charge to the plate causes the current
to cease. They are repelled by like charges.
Positive voltage on the plate attracts electrons
from the filament. Current flows!!!

-
23
Going One Way!
  • The creation of the Fleming diode opened up
    electrical technology to both alternating current
    and direct current.
  • Although now superceded by transistors and
    integrated circuits in electronic applications,
    diodes are still used in high-power transmitters,
    sensitive optical applications, and audio
    amplifiers.
  • Rectification
  • To convert alternating current into direct
    current.

24
But Wait Theres More!
25
Modulation Amplification!
  • Lee de Forest 1906
  • Modified Fleming's Valve by adding a grid to
    control
  • and amplify signals, and called his device the
    Audion.
  • His Audion tube, a three-electrode device
  • (plate, cathode, control grid), was a vacuum
    tube
  • which allowed for amplification for radio
    reception.
  • This "grid" was a bent wire between the plate and
    filament. de Forest discovered that if he applied
    the signal from the wireless-telegraph antenna to
    the grid instead of the filament, he could obtain
    a much more sensitive detector of the signal. In
    fact, the grid was changing ("modulating") the
    current flowing from the filament to the plate.
  • This device, the Audion, was the first successful
    electronic amplifier. It was the genesis of
    today's huge electronics industry.
  • Audion, Triode

26
How A Triode Works
Apply a like charge to the grid and the flow
stops!! (Its that magnetism thing at work
again!!!)
27
So What?!
  • A small electric current applied to the grid
    would result in the proportionate flow of a much
    larger current from the filament to the plate- in
    other words, amplification.
  • The Audion became know as the Triode and was the
    standard means of amplification until it was
    gradually replaced by the transistor in the
    1950's and 60's.
  • Without the Audion, inexpensive amplification of
    wireless voice transmissions would not have been
    possible, and Radio Corporation of America would
    have been a significantly different enterprise.

28
Modulation
  • the process of varying a periodic waveform in
    order to use that signal to convey a message
  • to vary the amplitude, frequency, or phase of (a
    carrier wave or a light wave) for the
    transmission of information (as by radio)

29
Amplification
  • increasing the power and/or amplitude of a
    signal.
  • Taking power from a power supply and controlling
    the output to match the input signal shape but
    with a larger amplitude.
  • In this sense, an amplifier may be considered as
    modulating the output of the power supply.

30
Whos Your Daddy?!
  • Lee de Forest
  • The father of radio

31
Wake up.... That's all!!
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