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Other symbols from electronics
In electronics, miniature components are often used. In this section
you will learn their symbols, and what each component does.
Transistors
Transistors
are tiny semiconductor devices that are used to switch or amplify currents
and voltages. There are many different types designed to perform specialised
tasks. Transistors allowed radios to be made portable as they replaced
cumbersome valves. Portable radios are sometimes called "transistors"
or "trannies". The transistor was invented in 1947, and the
three inventors, William Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Brattain, won
the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1956.
Transistors
can operate as switches or amplifiers, making them very useful components
in electronics. Transistors are polarised and must be connected the right
way round. Two types are NPN (negative - positive - negative) and PNP
(positive - negative - positive).
Integrated circuits
Integrated circuits (ICs) can have many components for a radio on
a tiny silicon "chip", which enables electronic equipment to
be extremely small. An example is the identification chip that can be
placed under your pet's skin in case it gets lost. Simple ICs have three
pins, ICs in your computer have many more pins. Modern computers and other
devices can have hundreds of intergrated circuits combined into one chip.
A CPU (Central Processor Unit) is an IC that can perform hundreds of tasks
per second or faster and may contain 20 million or more transistors.
Capacitors
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Basically, capacitors store electrical
energy, then release it in one hit. This is the symbol for a polarised
capacitor: Note how this differs from the symbol for a cell - both
lines are the same length. |
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The unit for capacitance is the Farad, named after
the Englishman, Michael Faraday. In the circuits you are likely
to use, capacitance is measured in microfarads (µF), or a unit
one thousand times smaller, the picofarad (pF).
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Light emitting diodes
| In miniature circuits, light globes are
too big. The small colored light on your stereo, computer or video
camera is a light emitting diode (or LED). Light emitting diodes are
used in the flashing red lights that cyclists have on their bikes.
They don't use much power and, by using capacitors in the electronic
circuitry, the lights flash as well. |
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