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Pinch-Off Voltage Explained

  Pinch-Off Voltage Pinch-Off Voltage (Semiconductor Physics) Concept: Pinch-off occurs when the depletion region width becomes equal to the channel thickness, fully depleting the channel. Step 1: Depletion Width Formula For an abrupt junction: W = sqrt((2 × Îµs × V) / (q × N)) W = depletion width εs = semiconductor permittivity V = applied voltage (pinch-off voltage) q = 1.6 × 10⁻¹⁹ C N = doping concentration Step 2: Pinch-Off Condition At pinch-off: W = a where a = channel thickness Step 3: Derivation a² = (2 × Îµs × Vp) / (q × N) Final Formula Vp = (q × N × a²) / (2 × Îµs) Step 4: Permittivity εs = εr × Îµ0 Where: ε0 = 8.85 × 10⁻¹² F/m εr = dielectric constant Important Observations Higher doping (N ↑) → higher pinch-off voltage Thicker channel (a ↑) → Vp increases sharply (a² dependence) Higher dielectric constant → lowers Vp Vp = (1.6×10⁻¹⁹ × N × a²) / (2 × Îµr × ...

Modern Fan Regulator (Phase Control) Explained

  Fan Regulator Math (Phase Control) Modern Fan Regulator (Phase Control) Modern fan regulators control power instead of just reducing voltage. They use a technique called phase control , which cuts parts of the AC waveform. Step 1: AC Voltage Equation v(t) = Vm sin(ωt) Vm = peak voltage ω = angular frequency Step 2: Cutting the Wave A TRIAC turns ON at angle α (firing angle) . 0 to α → No voltage α to Ï€ → Voltage passes Step 3: RMS Voltage The fan speed depends on RMS voltage: Vrms = Vm √[ (1 / 2Ï€) ∫(α to Ï€) sin²(θ) dθ ] After solving: Vrms = Vm √[ (1 / 2Ï€) ( (Ï€ − α)/2 + sin(2α)/4 ) ] What This Means α = 0° → Full speed α = 90° → Medium speed α → 180° → Very low speed Step 4: Power Delivered P ∝ Vrms² ...

Sampling and Z-Transform (Step-by-Step)

  Sampling and Z-Transform Example Sampling and Z-Transform (Step-by-Step) Step 1: Given Signal Continuous-time signal: x(t) = e -t Step 2: Sampling Sampling frequency: f s = 10 Hz Sampling period: T = 1 / f s = 0.1 sec Discrete signal: x[n] = x(nT) = e -0.1n Step 3: Z-Transform Definition: X(z) = Σ x[n] z -n Substitute x[n]: X(z) = Σ (e -0.1 ) n z -n This is a geometric series: X(z) = 1 / (1 - e -0.1 z -1 ) Multiply numerator and denominator by z: X(z) = z / (z - e -0.1 ) Step 4: Numerical Value Compute: e -0.1 ≈ 0.9048 Final answer: X(z) = z / (z - 0.9048) Step 5: Special Case If: x[n] = (0.5) n Then: X(z) = z / (z - 0.5) This corresponds to a different continuous signal: x(t) = e -6.93t Conclusion Sampling converts continuous signal to discrete signal. ...

Von Neumann Bottleneck Explained

  Von Neumann Bottleneck Von Neumann Bottleneck Introduction The von Neumann bottleneck is a fundamental limitation in traditional computer architectures where the CPU (processing unit) and memory are physically separate. Due to this separation, data must continuously move between memory and processor, creating a bottleneck that limits system performance. Why It Happens Single shared bus for data and instructions Limited data transfer bandwidth Separation of memory and processing units Problems Caused High latency Increased power consumption Limited scalability Inefficiency in data-intensive tasks Impact on AI/ML Modern AI systems require large-sca...

Impedance Matching in Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) Antennas

  Impedance Matching in GPR Antennas Impedance Matching in Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) Antennas 1. What “Matched Impedance” Means In a GPR system, impedance matching refers to making the antenna impedance ( Z a ) as close as possible to the soil impedance ( Z s ). Z a ≈ Z s This minimizes reflections at the boundary between the antenna and the ground. 2. Soil (Medium) Impedance The impedance of soil is given by: Z s = √(jωμ / (σ + jωε)) Where: ω = 2Ï€f → angular frequency μ → permeability ε → permittivity σ → conductivity j → imaginary unit 3. Low-Loss Soil Approximation If conductivity is very low: Z s ≈ √(μ / ε) = Z₀ / √ε r Where Z₀ ≈ 377 Ω (free-space impedance). Example: For dry soil (ε r ≈ 4) Z s = 377 / √4 = 188.5 Ω ...

Electric Field vs Electric Potential

  Electric Field vs Electric Potential Difference Between Electric Field and Electric Potential 1. Basic Meaning Electric Field (E): Force per unit charge at a point (vector). Electric Potential (V): Potential energy per unit charge (scalar). 2. Mathematical Definitions Electric Field E = F / q Units: N/C or V/m Electric Potential V = U / q Units: Volt (V) 3. Mathematical Relationship E = - dV/dx This shows that electric field is the rate of change of potential. 4. Integral Form V = - ∫ E · dr Potential is obtained by integrating the electric field. 5. Example (Point Charge) Electric Potential: V = (1 / 4πε₀) × (Q / r) Electric Field: E = (1 / 4πε₀) × (Q / r²) 6. Summary Table Feature Electric Field (E) Electric Potential (V) Nature Vector Scalar Meaning Force per charge Energy per charge ...

RL Circuit and Ripple Reduction

  RL Circuit and Ripple Reduction RL Circuit and Ripple Reduction RL Circuit Basics For an RL series circuit: V(t) = V R + V L = IR + L(dI/dt) Impedance Approach (for Ripple) For ripple frequency ω: Z R = R Z L = jωL Z = R + jωL |Z| = √(R² + (ωL)²) Ripple Current If ripple voltage is V r : I ripple = V r / √(R² + (ωL)²) Key Insight 1. Low Frequency Ripple ωL ≪ R I ripple ≈ V r / R Inductor has little effect. 2. High Frequency Ripple ωL ≫ R I ripple ≈ V r / (ωL) Strong ripple reduction. Ripple Reduction Factor Ripple Reduction = R / √(R² + (ωL)²) Larger L → less ripple Higher frequency → less ripple Larger R → more ripple Physical Meaning Resistor affects both DC and ripple Inductor resists only changing current ...

Ground Penetrating Radar Antenna

  Ground Penetrating Radar Antenna Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) Antenna A ground-penetrating radar (GPR) antenna is the part of a ground-penetrating radar system that sends and receives radio waves into the ground. How it Works A GPR system works by transmitting high-frequency electromagnetic waves into materials like soil, concrete, or ice. The antenna: Emits waves into the ground Receives signals that bounce back after hitting underground objects When these waves encounter objects such as pipes, rocks, or voids, they reflect back. The system measures the time taken and signal strength to create an image of subsurface features. Types of GPR Antennas High-Frequency Antennas (900 MHz – 2.6 GHz) Better resolution (clearer images) Shallow depth penetration Used for concrete inspection and ...

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