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| it keeps giving me a memory alloacation error? | |
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| Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 8388608 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 131072 bytes) in /home/httpd/vhosts/electro-tech-online.com/httpdocs/includes/functions_search.php on line 187!! any ideas? | |
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Hi all, Built a photodiode circuit (refer schematic Figure 1 - Link below) to recieve pulses - square wave on "on" period 10us with varyin duty cycles incident on the photodiode(BP104). On testing the circuit, found the output at the trans-resistance amplifier had some ringing at the edges (refer 2nd figure - 1st response). The further the distance of the incident signal from the transmitter, the more pronounced the ringing. Any ideas as to what is causing this? * please click on link for all figures and detailed explanantion: http://generous.boy.googlepages.com/...cievingcircuit was unable to upload onto this page -sorry for the inconvenience* | ||
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| ooops sori read it now - i need to make a few posts in order to be allowed to start a new thread!! Krud.. that doesnt leave me in a good situation at all | |
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| Your transistor circuit is shorting the output of the photodiode. Every photodiode amplifier circuit in Google that uses the photodiode with reversed bias like yours has the photodiode direct-coupled to the opamp's input without a coupling capacitor. The opamp's negative feedback resistor has a very high value for high gain and is a high resistance bias feed to the photodiode. The ringing is fixed with a small-value capacitor across the opamp's negative feedback resistor.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| What is the purpose of the gyrator? | |
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It serves to filter out ambient light or any other form of IR interference. Last edited by crush; 23rd October 2006 at 10:53 PM. | ||
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| The transistor must have DC current through it for it to be a gyrator. It has only the tiny leakage current of the photodiode so it isn't doing anything. The circuit should have a high resistance feedback resistor for the opamp for high gain and this resistor should bias the photodiode. Why not use a TSOP IR receiver IC instead of re-inventing the wheel?
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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so when a pulse of frequency of interest (100KHz) is incident on the photodiode, the transistor deprives the diode of supply due to the large time constant of R1-C1. so if this theory is right shouldnt the "gyrator" (i might be using the wrong terminology) filter out ambient sources of IR? Quote:
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| I can't start a new thread either so I will post it here...Nigel or any other mod please feel free to move it if you can start it in a new thread. I get the same error as Crush described... Hello everyone, I have been doing some electrolysis experiments lately and I need a strong power supply that has a high current (50A or higher) and low voltage of 6 volts. Is there a simple circuit off of 120VAC mains I can put together to make this work easily and cheaply. I think the easiest way would be to use 2N3055 since they are good for 15A, so a few of these together would suffice I assume. I don't know how to go about increasing current though. Help or Guidance would be really appreciated. thanks George L. | |
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| Your very low gain circuit barely works as "FAR" away as only 5cm. Is that anywhere near as good as a modern TV's remote that uses a TSOP IR receiver IC for its 10m range?
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| For your power supply topic, look at the current gain of a 2N3055. At only 10A its minimum current gain is only 5, and the datasheet doesn't talk about any higher current. It saturates poorly at 10A even with a whopping 3.3A of base current.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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The range i require is only 5 cm. I am transmitting unique ID's: 10us on, 10 us off - ID 1 10us on, 20 us off- ID 2 and so on.. At the moment i am just simply turnin the transmitter on and off with a fixed "on" period an duty cycle. It is controlled by a simple program toggling the pins of a micro which is controlling the mosfet to the transmitter LED. Photoreciever modules work on carrier frequencies, which would mean i would have to modulate my transmitted signal with a carrier frequency. so using a module would mean i wld have to shift away from the workings i have until now. Or is it an easy shift? | ||
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