Lesson 4 - LEDs and Photodiodes
Lesson 4 - LEDs and Photodiodes
• Using KVL
Photodiodes
• Performs the inverse function of an LED.
• A photodiode is operated in its reverse-bias
region.
• A light shining on semiconductor material has
enough energy to break co-valent bonds and
create free electron-hole pairs.
Photodiodes
• These free electron-hole pairs would increase the
reverse saturation current.
• The photocurrent is proportional to light
intensity.
• Photodiode characteristic:
Photodiode Characteristic
Example
• A given photodiode generates up to 50 A of
current under typical lighting conditions. Design
a circuit that converts the photocurrent into a
voltage, and select element values such that a
current of 50 A is converted into a 5 V output.
Solution
Reference: R. L. Boylestad and L. Nashelsky (2013) Electronic Devices and Circuit Theory (11th ed), Upper Saddle River: Pearson, pp. 826
Next Week
• Lesson 5: Transistor Behaviour and Models
• Lesson 6: The Transistor Inverter