ET212_Week 3 Lab_IngramJ
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Grantham University *
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ET212
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Electrical Engineering
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Jan 9, 2024
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Jason Ingram
GID: G00151729
Lab 3: Bridge Rectifier
Grantham University
Date: 11/5/2023
Introduction:
The purpose of this week’s lab is to build a circuit that is based on week 2 lab and to expand upon it and
add a bridge rectifier. After the lab has been built, we will compare the circuit using a capacitor and
without the capacitor. We will be running three different simulations, the first is output voltage, peak-
to-peak ripple voltage, and ripple frequency. At the end of the lab, we will be answering the following
review questions:
Compare a bridge rectifier circuit with full-wave rectifier center-tapped circuit which you did in
Lab 2. Which circuit has the higher output voltage?
Explain how you could measure the ripple frequency to determine if a diode was open in a
bridge rectifier circuit.
What is the maximum DC voltage you could expect to obtain from a transformer with a 3 Vrms
secondary using a bridge circuit with a filter capacitor?
Equipment/Components:
Multisim
30/3 Vrms center-tapped transformer
2 Diodes 1N4001
2 resistors (Set at 2.2kΩ)
1 100µF, 50V electrolytic capacitor
1 Fuse
Tektronix Oscilloscope
Agilent Multimeter
Agilent Function Generator
Procedure:
The first part of the lab is to construct a bridge rectifier circuit that is shown in the lab directions using
Multisim. The circuit will be using a 5% tolerance. Once the lab is built to direction, use the function
generator to provide the
V
AC
and run the simulation. The next step of the lab is to use the multimeter
to measure the rms and then the oscilloscope to measure the peak-to-peak of the output voltage
without the capacitor. Once the data for this part has been gathered and tabled, add the capacitor, and
run the simulation again
for the peak-to-peak and the ripple frequency, table this data as well and
compare the results between both simulations. After the data has been gathered for the capacitors,
choose one of the diodes of the bridge and open it, run the simulation, and explain what happens to the
output voltage, the ripple voltage, and the ripple frequency. Once the lab has been run and meet all the
requirements, investigate what happens to the load resistor using the 2.2kΩ with the 5% tolerance in
parallel with
R
L
∧
C
1
in the full-wave circuit. Gather all screenshots for all steps of the lab.
Calculations:
V
p
(
OUT
)
=
30
v
0.707
V
p
(
OUT
)
=
42.43
V
p
Circuit design:
Circuit without a capacitor and diode closed:
Circuit with the capacitor and diode closed:
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Bridge rectifier with second resistor in parallel:
Execution/Results:
Circuit without a capacitor and diode closed:
Circuit with the capacitor and diode closed:
Bridge rectifier with second resistor in parallel:
Analysis:
Without the capacitor
With the capacitor
Diode open
Output load voltage
1.4V
2.97V
2.91V
Peak-to-peak ripple
voltage
3.13V
98.4mV
194mV
Ripple frequency
100Hz
100Hz
50Hz
The results of the lab came to the same conclusion and met all expectations. The results did not show
any significant differences then what was expected before running the lab or making calculations. When
adding the bridge rectifier, there was a higher efficiency when using both the primary and secondary
transformer.
Compare a bridge rectifier circuit with full-wave rectifier center-tapped circuit which you did
in Lab 2. Which circuit has the higher output voltage?
The conclusion of this lab is that adding the bridge rectifier has a higher output voltage than it
did without the bridge.
Explain how you could measure the ripple frequency to determine if a diode was open in a
bridge rectifier circuit.
To tell if the diode is open, you must measure the input and output frequency. If the
measurement is equal then the diode is open, the circuit shows a half-wave rectifier.
What is the maximum DC voltage you could expect to obtain from a transformer with a 3
Vrms secondary using a bridge circuit with a filter capacitor?
The maximum DC voltage that is expected is 4.24V.
Conclusion:
The lab ran successfully. The results of the lab were as expected. I went into this lab not fully
understanding the lab or what a bridge rectifier really does, but at the end of the lab I was able to
understand it, along with the effects of adding a capacitor and additional resistance. When adding a
bridge, the transformer does not need to be grounded, however the bridge is able to use its full
potential of the primary and secondary windings of the transformer that is being used. When this is
done, it produces better output with a higher efficiency rating.
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