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Hardware Basics

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In the nucleus (center) Protons with a positive charge ... Resistor, variable resistor (pot, rheostat) Battery, switch. Capacitor, electrolytic capacitor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hardware Basics


1
Hardware Basics
2
Electricity
  • Electricity is the flow of electrons
  • Atoms contain
  • In the nucleus (center)
  • Protons with a positive charge
  • Neutrons with no charge (no consequence here)
  • Orbiting around the nucleus
  • Electrons with a negative charge


-
3
Charged Atoms
  • Atoms with more protons that electrons
  • Positively charged
  • Try to acquire additional electrons to get back
    in balance
  • Atoms with more electrons than protons
  • Negatively charged
  • Want to give up electrons to get back in balance
  • If you set up an imbalance, electrons will try to
    jump (flow) between atoms to correct this
  • This flow is electricity

4
Conductors and Insulators
  • Materials that allow electrons to flow easily are
    conductors
  • Most metals are good conductors
  • Materials that dont allow electrons to flow
    easily are insulators
  • E.g., plastic, rubber, glass
  • Some materials can be influenced to change from
    conducting to insulating (a very useful property)
  • Semiconductors

5
Basic Law of Charges
  • Like charges repel each other
  • Opposite charges attract each other
  • Exert a force
  • Can do work e.g., move something

6
Charge
  • Charge is measured in Coulombs ( C )
  • (A unit we wont use much)
  • Measure of how many more protons than electrons
    in a substance
  • 1 Coulomb 2.15 x 1018 excess protons

2.15 x 1018 extra electrons -1 C
7
Electromotive Force(Voltage)
  • Charge has the ability to do work
  • A potential to e.g. move something in one
    direction or another
  • Difference in potential (in charge) provides a
    force Electromotive Force (EMF) Voltage

Extra electrons

EMF (voltage)
8
Flow of electrons
Conductor
  • If this is a conductor then ½ the excess
    electrons will very rapidly flow to the other end
    to balance the charge

Extra electrons

EMF (voltage)
9
Flow of electrons
Conductor
  • If this is a conductor then ½ the excess
    electrons will very rapidly flow to the other end
    to balance the charge

½ the extra electrons
0 voltage
10
Flow of electrons
Conductor
  • If this is a conductor then ½ the excess
    electrons will very rapidly flow to the other end
    to balance the charge
  • And then things are not very interesting

½ the extra electrons
0 voltage
11
Flow of electrons
  • If this is a conductor then ½ the excess
    electrons will very rapidly flow to the other end
    to balance the charge
  • And then things are not very interesting
  • Hence we set up circuits (cycles, loops) to keep
    this going

12
Flow of Electrons
  • Current is the flow of electrons
  • Measured in Amperes (Amp, or A)
  • 1A is 1 Coulomb of charge flowing past a point
    per second

13
Current vs. Voltage
  • Water analogy
  • Useful, but only goes so far
  • Coulombs analogous to quantity (gallons)
  • Amps analogous to flow rate (gallons / sec)
  • Voltage analogous to pressure (lbs/ft2)

14
Resistance
  • Can have a lot of flow at low pressure or a lot
    of pressure but low volume
  • Depends on the size of the pipe
  • Resistance is analogous to the size of the pipe
  • Resistance is the opposition to current flow
  • Measured in Ohms ( O )

15
Ohms Law
  • Relates current, voltage, and resistance
  • Current normally denoted by variable I
  • Voltage normally denoted by variable V
  • Resistance normally denoted by variable R
  • V I R

16
Ohms Law
  • V IR
  • R V / I
  • I V / R

17
Ohms Law
  • In the electronics we will do, we tend to (try
    to) hold the voltage constant (or zero)
  • Typically 5v
  • starting to use 3.3v, but 5v still most common
  • I V / R I 5 / R
  • Raise the resistance, current drops
  • Lower the resistance, current rises

18
Ohms Law
  • I V / R I 5 / R
  • Raise the resistance, current drops
  • Lower the resistance, current rises
  • What happens if we lower the resistance towards
    zeros?

19
Ohms Law
  • I V / R I 5 / R
  • Raise the resistance, current drops
  • Lower the resistance, current rises
  • What happens if we lower the resistance towards
    zeros?
  • Current goes towards infinity
  • Power V I (related to heat)
  • Boom! (or Poof!)

20
Current Limiting
  • Important
  • This is how you (literally) fry hardware if you
    dont pay attention (trust me, I know)
  • Always think carefully (and check!) that the path
    from 5v source
  • From power supply, or from output pin of a chip
  • to ground (0v location) has appropriate
    resistance
  • Not a short circuit 0O
  • Current limiting resistor at value needed to stay
    within current limits of the device

21
Aside Units
  • Volts, Amps, Ohms
  • Normally use metric system unit prefixes
  • mega M million 1,000,000 106
  • kilo k thousand 1,000 103
  • one 1 100
  • milli m thousandth 0.001 10-3
  • micro µ millionth 0.000 001 10-6
  • nano n billionth 10-9
  • pico p trillionth 10-12

22
Examples
  • 5V with 10O ? 5/10 A 0.5A 500mA
  • For typical chips you will use Poof!
  • 5V with 100O ? 5/100 A 50mA
  • Still Poof!
  • 5V with 250O ? 5/250 A 20mA
  • OK for PIC processors, not for lots of other
    digital electronics
  • 5V with 10kO ? 5/10000 A 0.5mA
  • Good for most digital electronics

23
Schematic Diagrams xx
  • Wire, connection, cross, hop-over
  • Resistor, variable resistor (pot, rheostat)
  • Battery, switch
  • Capacitor, electrolytic capacitor
  • Diode, LED
  • Transistor (PNP, NPN)
  • Inductor, transformer
  • Integrated circuit

24
Schematic Diagrams
25
AC vs. DC
  • DC Direct Current
  • Current flows steadily in one direction
  • Most of what we will do is DC
  • AC Alternating Current
  • Current flows in one direction then another
  • Wall current does this
  • Alternating 60 times per sec
  • 60 Hz

V
V
26
Capacitance
  • Capacitor
  • Device with two conducting plates separated by
    insulating material (called dielectric)
  • Stores electric charge in the dielectric
  • Water metaphor
  • Consider a pipe with a rubber balloon blocking it
  • DC current bulges out the balloon (charges the
    capacitor)
  • But then stops flowing
  • Release the pressure the charge drains back out
    over time
  • AC current can go back and forth continuously
  • Capacitor blocks DC but allows AC to pass

27
Capacitance
  • Capacitance is measured in Farads ( F ) and
    denoted by variable C
  • Amount of charge divided by voltage across plates
  • Charge (in Coulombs) denoted by Q
  • C Q / V

28
Series and Parallel Circuits
  • Series circuit
  • Parallel circuit

29
Series and Parallel Circuits
  • Combining resistors
  • Rtotal-series R1 R2
  • Rtotal-par (R1 R2) / (R1 R2)

30
Series and Parallel Circuits
  • Combining capacitors
  • Ctotal-series (C1 C2) / (C1 C2)
  • Ctotal-par C1 C2

31
Digital Electronics
  • Computer circuits treat signals as digital values
  • Consider signals to only have two states 1 or 0
  • 5v is considered to be 1
  • 0v is considered to be 0

32
Digital Electronics
5v
  • But need to leave some room for error or
    fluctuation
  • Between VHMin and 5v considered 1
  • Between 0v and VLmax considered 0
  • Between VLmax and VHMin is undefined (and
    unpredictable)
  • Can pass through this but you dont want to stay
    there long

1
VHMin
??
VLmax
0
0v
33
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