introduction to the oscilloscope
DESCRIPTION
Introduction to the Oscilloscope. Professor Ahmadi ECE002. OBJECTIVES. Review Electrical Signals D.C. (Direct Current) Signals A.C. (Alternating Current) Signals Explain Common Lab Equipment Oscilloscope, Function Generator, etc. Introduction to Oscilloscope Triggering. Electrical Signal. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Introduction to the Oscilloscope
Professor Ahmadi
ECE002
George Washington University
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OBJECTIVESReview Electrical Signals
D.C. (Direct Current) SignalsA.C. (Alternating Current) Signals
Explain Common Lab EquipmentOscilloscope, Function Generator, etc.
Introduction to Oscilloscope Triggering
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Electrical SignalHow do we classify the signals that we measure?
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Electrical Signals: D.C. Signal
A direct current or D.C. signal is one that only flows in a single direction.
Typical SourcesBatteriesAgilent Power Supply in the ECE labs
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X=TIME (seconds)
Y=VO
LTAG
E (v
olts
)
5 10 15 20
5
2.5
-2.5
-5
What is the value at 5 Seconds?20 Seconds?
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Electrical Signal: A.C. Signal
A.C. or Alternating Current signals are ones that change direction over time. As time increases our voltage fluctuates up and down. Typical Sources
Function Generators Electrical Outlets in Buildings
So at time=2.5s, what is the voltage? And again at 10seconds?...15 seconds?
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X=TIME (seconds)
Y=VO
LTAG
E (v
olts
)
5 10 15 20
5
2.5
-2.5
-5
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Electrical SignalsDC Signals are usually characterized by their
voltage.AC Signals are characterized by their:
ShapeFrequency (Cycles Per Second)Period (Seconds Per Cycle)Amplitude
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Common Lab Equipment
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What is the purpose of an oscilloscope
The purpose of an oscilloscope is to measure a voltage that changes with time and show it in a graphical format
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1) Here is the oscilloscope in our lab
-Notice the X-Y axes2) Here is our alternating
voltage signal from before
3) If we measure our signal with the scope, it would look like this!
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What are the major components?
Display Screen Displays an input signal
with respect to time. Control Panel
Adjusts how the input signal is displayed.
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What do we now know about the scope?
What must the X-Axis represent?What must the Y-Axis represent?
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TIME
VOLTAGE
• So…what do the dials do?
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Oscilloscope: Screen Notice that the screen has
ruled divisions both horizontally and vertically.
The axes can be scaled, for example…
If each vertical division is worth 5 seconds, what time is represented by this point?
If each horizontal line is worth 1 volt, what voltage is represented by this point?
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Oscilloscope: Control Panel
The section to the right of the screen contains the controls necessary to adjust how the waveform is displayed on the screen.
The controls allow you to alter the sweep time, amplitude, and triggering method. (Note, these topics will be discussed later)
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Oscilloscope: Input Channels
How do we get the voltage into the scope? This area is broken into two parts
Left Half for Channel 1 (X) Right Half for Channel 2 (Y)
In the center is a switch that determines which channel will serve as the input to the scope: 1, 2, Dual or Add.
Why would we want more than 1 channel?
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Channel 1 Channel 2
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Equipment: Function Generator
Purpose: Produces waves of different Shapes (sinusoidal,
square, etc.) Amplitude Frequency
Several available in the lab, but we will use the one built into the Instek Oscilloscope. (Shown)
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Equipment: DC Power Supply
Purpose: Produces constant voltage or current signals.
This DC Power supply is capable of generating voltages from -25V to 25V.
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TriggeringTelling the Oscilloscope when to capture information.
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TriggeringElectric signals change much faster than we can
observe.To view a meaningful version of the signal, we
must tell the Oscilloscope when to refresh the display.
We accomplish this by setting a Triggering Level.
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Triggering
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Without Triggering
With Triggering
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TriggeringWe want to tell the oscilliscope when it is the
best time for it to “refresh” the displayIn our wave below, we tell the scope to “trigger”
or ‘capture’ the signal when it is going upward AND hits 2.0Volts
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Going up!
AND
When at 2.0 Volts on our waveform!
SO, ‘trigger’ condition is:When we’re