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Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1
Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1
Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1
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Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1

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Some years ago I had written a book directed to anyone who designs electronic and electric circuits. Engineers, technicians, teachers, students and hobbyists took a real benefit from that book. The original book is now out of print, being available only used issues. Since the book is very useful, the author decided to review the old edition, add new content and so create a new book for anyone who need a fast access to formulas, tables and calculations when designing his projects or solving a problem.

The author, who has himself designed multitudes of projects and circuits during his life, publishing many books and hundreds of articles in electronics magazines and teaching electronics, has collected an assortment of all basic information necessary for calculations needed when designing new projects or solving a problem. More part of these formulas and calculations is now in the author´s site. The site also has versions in Portuguese and in Spanish. In the site the reader will also find practical examples in projects or articles where many of the formulas shown in this book are used.
When starting a project or solving a problem the main difficulty the designer or student founds is how to locate the desired information. This information is normally spread over a large number of resources, such as books, handbooks, Internet, and magazine articles.

Although many of us who are experienced in electronics have in mind the principal formulas, we sometimes have trouble with the forgotten constant, multiplication factor or exponent. Finding these values is sometimes difficult depending of the circumstances, such as where you are at the time, or the amount of resources at your disposal.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherEditora NCB
Release dateAug 5, 2016
ISBN9788565051057
Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1

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    Book preview

    Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1 - Newton C. Braga

    Handbook of Electronics Formulas and Calculations - Volume 1

    Electricity and Basic Electronics

    Newton C. Braga

    São Paulo - 2016

    Institute NCB

    www.newtoncbraga.com

    leitor@newtoncbraga.com.br

    HANDBOOK OF ELECTRONICS FORMULAS AND CALCULATIONS – vol.1

    Author: Newton C. Braga

    São Paulo - Brazil – 2016

    key-words: Electronic, formulas, calculations, electricity, mechatronics, engineering

    Copyright by

    INSTITUTO NEWTON C BRAGA

    2ª edition

    All rights reserved. No part of this book shall be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. No patent liability is assumed with taken in the preparation of this book, the author, the publisher or saller assume no responsibility for erros or omissions. Neither is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of information containes hereing.

    Officer responsible: Newton C. Braga

    Design and Coordination: Renato Paiotti

    INSTITUTE NEWTON C. BRAGA

    http://www.newtoncbraga.com

    Índice

    Preface

    SI Unit rules and style conventions

    Part 1 - DC Formulas

    1. Units

    2. Resistance of a conductor

    3. Conductance

    4. Conductance of a Length of Wire

    5. Thermal Influence in the Resistance of a Cable

    6. Ohm´s Law

    7. Electric Power

    8. Joule´s Law

    9. Electric Energy

    10. Electrolysis (Faraday´s Law)

    11. Resistors in Series

    12. Resistors in Parallel

    13. Voltage Divider (resistive)

    14. Loaded Voltage Divider (resistive)

    15. First Kirchhoff´s Law

    16. Second Kirchhoff´s Law

    17. Capacitance

    18. Planar Capacitor

    19. Breakdown Voltage in a Capacitor

    20. Energy Stored in a Capacitor

    21. Capacitors in Parallel

    22. Capacitors in Series

    23. Magnetic Field of a Solenoid

    24. Magnetic Induction inside a Solenoid

    25. Inductance

    26. Inductances in series

    27. Inductances in Parallel

    28. Mutual Inductance

    Part 2 - AC Formulas

    29. Frequency and Period

    30. Cyclic or Angular Frequency

    31. Average Value

    32. RMS Value

    33. Frequency & Wavelength

    34. Capacitive Reatance

    35. Inductive Reactance

    36. Quality Factor (Factor-Q)

    37. Ohm´s Law for AC Circuits

    38. RL in Series

    39. RC in Series

    40. LC in Series

    41. RLC in Series

    42. RC in Parallel

    43. LR in Parallel

    44. LC in Parallel

    45. Ressonance

    46. Time Constant (RC Circuit)

    47. Time Constant (LC)

    48. Inductive Coupling Using Transformers

    49. Direct Inductive Coupling

    50. Ohmic Coupling

    51. Capacitive Coupling

    52. Low- Pass Filters

    53. High Pass Filters

    54. Band-Pass Filters

    55. Differentiation

    56. Integration

    57. Noise

    58. Bandwidth

    59. Voltage Ratio in Transformers

    60. Current Ratio in Transformers

    61. Impedance Ratio in Transformers

    62. Decibel

    63. The Neper

    64. Balanced T-Attenuator

    65. Balanced π-Attenuator

    66. Unbalanced T-Attenuator

    67. Unbalanced π-Attenuator

    68. Half-Wave Dipole

    69. Folded Half-Wave Dipole

    70. Range (VHF and upper signals)

    71. Coaxial Cable

    72. Two-Wire Balanced Line

    73. Impedance Match or π-Network

    Part 3 - Electronic Circuits

    74. Semiconductor Diode

    75. Half-Wave Rectifier

    76. Full-Wave Rectifier

    77. LC Filter Coefficient

    78. RC Filter Coefficient

    79. Ripple Factor

    80. Filter Inductance

    81. Filter Capacitance

    82. Conventional Voltage Doubler

    83. Cascade Voltage Doubler

    84. Bridge Voltage Doubler

    85. Full Wave Tripler

    86. Cascade Voltage Tripler

    87. Full-Wave Voltage Quadrupler

    88. Zener Diode

    89. Capacitive Voltage Divider

    90. NTC

    91. PTC

    92. VARICAPS

    Part 4 - TRANSISTORS

    93. Transistor Static Current-Gain (Common Emitter)

    94. Transistor Static Current Gain (Common Base Configuration)

    95. Relationship between Alpha and Beta

    96. Hybrid Parameters

    97. Common Base

    98. Common Emitter

    99. Common Collector

    Part 5 - Basic Quantities of Circuits Using Transistores

    100. Short-Circuit Output

    101. Open Circuit Output

    102. Short-Circuit Input

    103. Open-Circuit Input

    104. Common-Base Configuration Usual Formulas

    105. Common-Emitter Configurations Usual Formulas

    106. Common Collector Usual Formulas

    Part 6 - TRANSISTOR PRACTICAL FORMULAS

    107. LOAD RESISTANCE

    108. Base- Biasing Resistance

    109. Automatic-Biasing Resistance

    Part 7 - JUNCTION FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR-JFET AND THE MOS FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR (MOSFET)

    110. Common Source

    111 – Common Drain

    112. Common Gate

    113. UJT – Unujunction Transistor

    114. SCR

    115. TRIAC

    Part 8 - OSCILLATORS

    116. Astable Multivibrator

    117. Neon-Lamp Oscillator

    118. Phase Shift Oscillator

    119. Wien Bridge Oscillator

    120. Twin-T Oscillator

    121. Hartley Oscillator

    122. Colpitts Oscillator

    123. CMOS Two-Gate Oscillator (I)

    124. CMOS Two-Gate Oscillator (II)

    125. CMOS Schmitt Trigger Oscillator

    126. The Astable 555

    127. Monostable 555

    Preface

    Some years ago I had written a book directed to anyone who designs electronic and electric circuits. Engineers, technicians, teachers, students and hobbyists took a real benefit from that book. The original book is now out of print, being available only used issues. Since the book is very useful, the author decided to review the old edition, add new content and so create a new book for anyone who need a fast access to formulas, tables and calculations when designing his projects or solving a problem.

    The author, who has himself designed multitudes of projects and circuits during his life, publishing many books and hundreds of articles in electronics magazines and teaching electronics, has collected an assortment of all basic information necessary for calculations needed when designing new projects or solving a problem.

    More part of these formulas and calculations is now in the author´s site at www.newtoncbraga.com. The site also has versions in Portuguese (www.newtoncbraga.com.br) and in Spanish (www.incb.com.mx).

    In the site the reader will also find practical examples in projects or articles where many of the formulas shown in this book are used.

    When starting a project or solving a problem the main difficulty the designer or student founds is how to locate the desired information. This information is normally spread over a large number of resources, such as books, handbooks, Internet, and magazine articles.

    Although many of us who are experienced in electronics have in mind the principal formulas, we sometimes have trouble with the forgotten constant, multiplication factor or exponent. Finding these values is sometimes difficult depending of the circumstances, such as where you are at the time, or the amount of resources at your disposal.

    By putting the principal formulas and tables in a unique place, a designer can find the desired information easier, and, more importantly, can take this information wherever he goes.

    And with the aid of the new technologies, the information can be accessed by a tablet, Smartphone or a laptop, if you have the virtual version. This is the aim of this book.

    But formulas and tables are not useful only when designing a new configuration. They are necessary when we need to know what happen when a specific working circuit is altered, for the electronic student doing homework or the researchers in other fields who work with electronic equipment.

    The tables contain a large amount of important information, such as particular values of constants, physical properties of circuits and materials, and even calculated values that can´t be found without using complex or hard-to-do procedures.

    Finally, we have laws and theorems describing the properties of circuits and devices, and procedures to be used in calculations, which are very important when doing practical works.

    Most of the formulas and tables are accompanied by application examples. They are very important to show the reader how the calculations are made when using the given information. To avoid problems with incorrect results, in all formulas and applications the units to be used are indicated.

    The formulas range from the simplest, where elementary arithmetic operations such as sum, subtraction, multiplication and division, are used, to the more complex that require some good working knowledge of algebraic and trigonometric functions, or even differential and integral calculus.

    Although mathematics is an exact science, when some calculations are applied to other sciences and in real-life electronics, the results can be different from the expected. When making calculations involving electronic circuits, it is often said that When working with electronics, practice and theory often disagree.

    This means that in many cases the results found in calculations will need some adjustments when applied to an actual application.

    This fact is applicable even to the tolerances of the electronic components used in practical applications, plus the fact that many formulas are not exact, but empirical.

    But why use an exact formula, including complex logarithms, trigonometric functions or differential equations, if we can get results good enorgh to make a circuit work by using a reduced formula?

    In many stages of the design process, the results will depend on the tolerance of the components used.

    This explains why in many cases we´ll not give the exact formula but an empirical formula, where the complex part of the calculations will be reduced to a constant, or even eliminated.

    This means that this book is not an advanced resource for engineers or researches that need a very accurate result in their calculation. We can consider that in many cases the formulas are empiric, i.e. giving approximate results, but good enough to put a project to work.

    About the units – the preference is the use of the decimal system or International Units System (SI - Système International d´Unités). Only in the cases where conversion formulas and tables are given will other units appear. The notations will be that recommended by NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology), but in some cases, to make easier the use by reader less experienced with calculations, some non-conventional notations can be found.

    Although the preferred symbol to indicate multiplication operations is the x, in some cases we also use the bullet (*) or even the point (.).

    The tables were obtained from different sources – physics handbooks, engineering books, manufacturers and technical documentation were consulted. As for composition of materials, the calculation procedures can change from one manufacturer to another,

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