Laboratory 1 Introduction To The Circuit Laboratory
Laboratory 1 Introduction To The Circuit Laboratory
This is the first laboratory where you will deal with such matters as the course objectives,
syllabus, grading policy, laboratory rules and procedures, safety issues, preparation of
prelab and lab reports, the resistance color codes, the breadboard, and the Lab VIEW
equipment.
Objectives
Syllabus
Although each teacher provides his/her own syllabus to the respective section(s), there
are some common features. All students perform the same set of experiments (in the
order listed in this manual) and all are graded by the same criteria.
Grades
There are 10 labs in total. Lab reports are due for five of them (labs 2, 5, 6, 7, 9) and
some of them have prelabs. We will also have a final project for which a lab report will
be due. The grades for the reports and lab sessions will be one out of A, B, C.
Prelab Reports
In this manual, the write up for each experiment starts with a brief review of the relevant
theory in the Introduction part. The instructor presents the underlying ideas in the class
before the experiment is performed. The prelab report will consist of answers to questions
posed in the introduction. The report will be due on the day the experiment will be
performed. It will be collected at the start of the class. Students not presenting the report
will be denied access to that experiment.
Lab Reports
These reports are written after the experiment is complete and they are due a week after.
Some general guidelines are given below. Your instructor may give you additional and
specific guidelines for preparing these reports.
Several lab reports will be required during the semester. Typically, they are from four to
seven pages long, and are typed. Although the laboratory TA will explain what is
required for each lab report, in general each should contain the following sections:
Data: This should include a complete list of all the equipment used with
model and serial numbers; schematics of the circuits used; all calculated
and measured data in the form or tables or graphs; and the calculation of
percentage errors. Be sure to show a clear relation between the data and
the schematics. The data should be exactly what was obtained in the
experiment. Include units with the values. Additionally, carry only the
appropriate number of significant digits in your results.
Also,
Be objective and do not use phrases like “I was pleased . . .,” “The lab
went well . . .,”“It was good to know . . ., etc.
Always give numerical results when applicable. Do not just say “the
results were as expected.” Specify the actual results, the expected results,
any errors, and explain them.
Keep everything neat and label everything clearly. Start each section on a
new page. Write on only one side of each sheet.
Remember to number the equations and use figure numbers and table
numbers for any drawings or tables.
For reasons of his or her own, the laboratory TA may modify any of the above. Follow
the instructions of the laboratory TA.
Final Exam
Passing the course requires also passing the final exam. A student, who fails the final
exam, automatically fails the course, independent of other grades.
Safety
When working in any electrical laboratory, always keep electrical safety in mind.
Following are some safety rules that each student should be aware of before beginning a
laboratory experiment. Some of the rules do not apply to this laboratory, but to other
electrical laboratories.
Electrical Shock:
A current from 8 mA to 100 mA produces a painful shock, and perhaps also loss of
muscular control so that the victim cannot free him or herself from the cause of the shock.
Severe burns occur for a current greater than 200 mA. Also, the muscular contractions are
so severe that chest muscular reaction clamps the heart and stops it for the duration of the
shock. This reaction prevents ventricular fibrillation. Artificial respiration should be
administered immediately and in most cases the victim can be revived.
Resistance Color Codes
Unit of Resistance:
The SI unit of resistance is the Ohm, and the unit symbol is the capital Greek letter
omega Ω. Unit prefixes are used for writing convenience. For example, the prefixes k
and M represent 103 and 106 , respectively. Thus, 33 000 is written as 33 kΩ (33
kilohoms), and 1 200 000 as 1.2 MΩ (1.2 megohms).
Color Code:
The most popular resistance color code has nominal resistance values and tolerances
indicated by the colors of either three or four bands around the resistor casing, as shown
in Fig. 1.1. (Sometimes there is a fifth band for failure rate. It will not be considered.)
The colors of the first and second bands correspond, respectively, to the first two digits of
the nominal resistance. The first digit, though, is never a zero. The color of the third
band, except for silver and gold, corresponds to the number of zeros that follow the first
two digits. A third band of gold corresponds to a multiplier of 10-1 , and one of silver to
10-2 . The fourth band indicates the tolerance and is either gold, silver, or is missing.
Gold corresponds to a tolerance of 5 percent, silver to 10 percent, and a missing band to
20 percent.
The resistance color code is shown in Table 1.1. As can be determined from it, a resistor
with bands of red, yellow, orange, and gold is a 24 kΩ resistor of 5% tolerance. Also, a
resistor with bands of blue, gray, yellow, and silver is a 680 kΩ resistor of 10% tolerance.
And, a 1 Ω resistor of 20% tolerance has color bands of brown, black, gold, and missing.
Remember that the first digit is never zero, which means that the first color band is never
black.
Breadboard Description
Most of the circuits built and tested in this laboratory will be assembled on a
“breadboard,”which looks like a piece of plastic with holes in it. Electrical components
(resistors, capacitors, wires, etc.) are inserted into the holes. What makes a breadboard
unique is that certain combinations of the holes are electrically connected with each other.
Since these connections are inside the plastic, they cannot be seen. Thus, a user must
know which holes are connected. Most breadboards have a similar pattern of
interconnections.
BREADBOARD CONNECTIONS:
The internal connections inside the breadboard run in both vertical and horizontal lines,
as shown in Fig. 1.2. It is important to remember that
Fig. 1.2
Fig. 1.3
Note: Measurements of voltage, current, and resistance can be performed either by the
virtual bench digital multimeter (DMM) or by the hand- held multimeter. The connections
for each measurement are shown in the Appendix on the last two pages of the write up of
this experiment (Circuit Synthesis on a Breadboard). Note that for voltage measurements,
the meter is connected in parallel and for current measurements it is connected in series.
In order to avoid damage to components and instruments, it is essential that the
source be connected or turned on only when you have verified that the connections
have been correctly made.
Introduction to the NI ELVIS Workspace
The control panel is also referred to as a soft front panel (from LabView). The soft panel
is capable of launching several instruments including an arbitrary waveform generator,
Bode analyzer, digital bus reader/writer, digital multimeter (DMM), dynamic signal
analyzer, function generator, impedance analyzer, oscilloscope, I-V analyzer, and
variable power supplies. Additional panels can be written through the LabView API to
interface with ELVIS. The use of these functions will be covered as the semester
progresses.
a. Start NI ELVIS by going to the Windows Start menu and selecting Programs ->
National Insturments -> NI ELVIS 2.0-> NI ELVIS
b. You can launch the DMM by selecting Digital Multimeter from the menu. Once
active, you should have a new panel similar to the one depicted in Figure 1. The
DMM can be used for a variety of operations including measuring AC and DC
voltages and currents, resistance, capacitance, and inductance.
This is a top-level, stand-alone instrument that controls the variable DC supplies in the
NI ELVIS Benchtop Workstation. You can control the variable power supplies either
through the NI ELVIS - Variable Power Supplies SFP (Software Mode) or the
hardware controls on the benchtop workstation (Manual Mode).
a. Connect the Variable Power Supplies signals, SUPPLY+ and SUPPLY–, on the
NI ELVIS Prototyping Board to the location where they are needed. These are
independent power supplies, and both signals are referenced to the GROUND
signal.
b. The variable power supplies are active and output 0V when the panel is
launched. Select the desired voltage for each supply in the Voltage Adjust
control, and the output updates accordingly.
V. Exercise
This part of the experiment will demonstrate LabVIEW’s ability in making both voltage
and current measurements.
Figure 3.
VOLTAGE SOURCE
RED
From Voltage
Source
BLACK GND
RED
+
OHM To Multimeter
R
METER
-
BLACK
GND
RED
I I
CURRENT V
V To Multimeter
METER
BLACK
GND
VOLTMETER (VOLTAGE MEASUREMENT)
V V
+ Vr - + Vr -
RED
VOLTAGE
To Multimeter
METER
BLACK
EXAMPLE
RED
V
BLACK
GND GND
From
Voltage
Source