Chapter 3 problems
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3.9
Part A
- Using KVL:
- Thus the two points for the load line are and
- Overlay the above two points with the diode characteristics to find the answer.
Part B
- Thevenin Equivalent: and
- Using KVL: , thus and for the load line.
- can be read from the load line graph. We can then use this information to find the voltage over .
Part C
- Thevenin Equivalent: and
3.17
Part A
- Guessing D1 is on, D2 and D3 are off. Looking at the voltage drops, this is very unlikely.
- Guessing D1 off, D2 on, D3 off. and .
- Checking for positive current through presumed on diodes and negative voltage across the presumed off diodes.
- D1 and D2 fail. D3 passes.
- Guessing D1 and D2 on, D3 off.
- and . D1, D2, D3 pass.
Check each guess please. More importantly, check the wrong assumptions.
Part B Need help on this one.
- , : D1, D4 on. D2, D3 off.
- , : D1, D4 on. D2, D3 off.
- , : D2, D3 on. D1, D4 off.
- , : D2, D3 on. D1, D4 off.
V=0. D1, D4 on. Can you really sink current into a voltage source? I don't see how you will ever have negative voltage across the diodes.
3.32
- How does this circuit work?