Smart Whistle Counter For Pressure Cooker
Smart Whistle Counter For Pressure Cooker
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Here is a PIN diode based fire sensor that activates an alarm when it detects fire.
Thermistor based fire alarms have a drawback; the alarm turns on only if the fire heats
the thermistor in close vicinity. In this circuit, a sensitive PIN diode is used as a fire
sensor for a longer-range fire detection.
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10/15/22, 8:15 PM Smart Whistle Counter for Pressure Cooker
It detects visible light and infrared (IR) in the range of 430nm – 1100nm. So visible light
and IR from the fire can easily activate the sensor to trigger the alarm. It also detects
sparks in the mains wiring and, if these persist, it gives a warning alarm.
It is an ideal protective device for showrooms, lockers, record rooms and so on. Author’s
prototype is shown in Fig. 1.
PIN diode BPW34 (Fig. 2) is used in the circuit as light and IR sensor. BPW34 is a 2-pin
photodiode with anode (A) and cathode (K). The anode end can easily be identified from
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10/15/22, 8:15 PM Smart Whistle Counter for Pressure Cooker
the top-view flat surface of the photodiode. A small solder point to which a thin wire is
connected is the anode and the other one is the cathode terminal.
BPW34 is a tiny PIN photodiode or mini solar cell with radiant sensitive surface that
generates 350mV DC open-circuit voltage when exposed to 900nm light. It is sensitive to
natural sunlight and also to light from fire. So it is ideal for use as a light sensor.
BPW34 photodiode can be used in zero-bias as well as reverse-bias states. Its resistance
decreases when light falls on it.
Circuit diagram
Circuit diagram of the PIN diode based fire sensor is shown in Fig. 3. It is built around 9V
battery, PIN diode BPW34 (D1), op-amp CA3140 (IC1), counter CD4060 (IC2), transistors
BC547 (T1 and T2), a piezo buzzer (PZ1) and a few other components.
In the circuit, PIN photodiode BPW34 is connected to the inverting and non-inverting
inputs of op-amp IC1 in reverse-biased mode to feed photo current into the input of op-
amp. CA3140 is a 4.5MHz BiMOs op-amp with MOSFET inputs and bipolar output.
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10/15/22, 8:15 PM Smart Whistle Counter for Pressure Cooker
Gate-protected MOSFET (PMOS) transistors in the input circuit provide very high input
impedance, typically around 1.5T ohms. The IC requires very low input current, as low as
10pA, to change output status to high or low.
Circuit operation
Large-value feedback resistor R1 sets the gain of the transimpedance amplifier since it is
in inverting configuration. Connection of non-inverting input to ground provides low
impedance load for the photodiode, which keeps the photodiode voltage low.
The photodiode operates in the photovoltaic mode with no external bias. Feedback of
the op-amp keeps the photodiode current equal to the feedback current through R1. So
the input offset voltage due to the photodiode is very low in this self-biased photovoltaic
mode. This permits a large gain without any large-output offset voltage. This
configuration is selected to get large gain in low-light conditions.
Normally, in ambient light condition, photocurrent from the PIN diode is very low; it
keeps output of IC1 low. When the PIN diode detects visible light or IR from fire, its
photo current increases and transimpedance amplifier IC1 converts this current to
corresponding output voltage. High output from IC1 activates transistor T1 and LED1
glows. This indicates that the circuit has detected fire. When T1 conducts, it takes reset
pin 12 of IC2 to ground potential and CD4060 starts oscillating.
IC2 is a binary counter with ten outputs that turn high one by one when it oscillates due
to C1 and R6. Oscillation of IC2 is indicated by the blinking of LED2. When output Q6 (pin
4) of IC2 turns high after 15 seconds, T2 conducts and activates piezo buzzer PZ1, and
LED3 also glows. The alarm repeats again after 15 seconds if fire persists.
You can also turn on an AC alarm that produces a loud sound by replacing PZ1 with a
relay circuitry (not shown here). The AC alarm is activated through contacts of the relay
used for this purpose.
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