1 Page

EE3111_lab_3

Course: EE 3111, Fall 2009
School: Milwaukee School of...
Rating:
 
 
 
 
 

Word Count: 172

Document Preview

School Milwaukee of Engineering (c) MSOE 2009 Dr.-Ing. Joerg Mossbrucker EE3111 Lab week 3: Zener-diode stabilized Power supply. 1 Design Goals Design a 12V power supply with a Zener diode Determine output resistance Determine power supply regulation Prelaboratory investigation Design your circuit. Calculate maximum power dissipation for all circuit elements. Simulate your circuit for different loads From the...

Register Now

Unformatted Document Excerpt

Coursehero >> Wisconsin >> Milwaukee School of Engineering >> EE 3111

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one
below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.
School Milwaukee of Engineering (c) MSOE 2009 Dr.-Ing. Joerg Mossbrucker EE3111 Lab week 3: Zener-diode stabilized Power supply. 1 Design Goals Design a 12V power supply with a Zener diode Determine output resistance Determine power supply regulation Prelaboratory investigation Design your circuit. Calculate maximum power dissipation for all circuit elements. Simulate your circuit for different loads From the simulation determine output resistance and supply regulation Laboratory investigation Build your circuit. Determine the DC open-circuit (i.e. no-load) load voltage. Determine the DC load voltage for at least two loads. different Determine the output resistance. Determine the load voltage for at least two different supply voltages and constant load. Determine the supply regulation. Analysis Show all obtained voltages. Assume that the supply voltage has a 1Vp ripple voltage. Calculate the ripple voltage for your circuit (use the supply regulation calculated above) Lab Notebook Purpose of this lab. Circuit design and calculations. All simulation results. Picture of build circuit. All measured component values. All measurement results (i.e. voltmeter display, oscilloscope screenshots etc.) All calculated results. 2 3 4 5
Find millions of documents on Course Hero - Study Guides, Lecture Notes, Reference Materials, Practice Exams and more. Course Hero has millions of course specific materials providing students with the best way to expand their education.

Below is a small sample set of documents:

Milwaukee School of Engineering - GE - 300
Internet Sources for Company Financial Informationhttp:/www.nasdaq.com/ http:/www.nyse.com/ http:/www.amex.com/ http:/www.wallstreetcity.com/ http:/www.investorama.com/ http:/www.waterhouse.com/ http:/www.stockmaster.com/ http:/fast.quote.com/ http:
CSU Fullerton - BPJ - 444
2005-03-1020.0022.87916659falsesunoco0.02005-03-1445.8659.17016838trueesso0.02005-03-2920.0023.22917273falsesunoco8.012005-04-0422.0025.31517430falsepioneer0.02005-04-0944.2952.17217593trueesso6.412005-04-1738
East Los Angeles College - MODULE - 2022024010
#%NewTest#SERIAL NUMBER : 20220240100675TEST MADE BY : muhLOCATION NAME : ManchesterRun number : 1732TEST_DATE : 05/04/2005PASSED : YESPROBLEM : NO#%DAQ_INFO##HOST"MODTEST"#VERSION"3.42"#DUT"Endcap_Outer"
East Los Angeles College - MODULE - 001725
EVENT 0 Thu Mar 31 11:55:45 2005 StartupEVENT 1 Thu Mar 31 11:56:45 2005 ConfirmationTestEVENT 2 Thu Mar 31 11:56:45 2005 LV OFFEVENT 3 Thu Mar 31 11:56:48 2005 LV ONEVENT 4 Thu Mar 31 11:57:20 2005 RestartEVENT 5 Thu Mar 31 11:57:22 2
University of Texas - BA - 386
One Way ANOVAANOVA stands for Analysis of Variance ANOVA allows us to compare the means from more than two sets of scores. A significant ANOVA indicates that changes in the independent variable affect the dependent variable. ANOVA does not indicate
East Los Angeles College - LJ - 562
0.1814307421 0.1812632084 1.0640749931 0.7266527414 -0.3653018475 -0.7023832798 0.1811132580 1.0639123917 0.7264940143 -0.3654442430 -0.7025200129 0.1811347902 0.1816887707 1.9497182369 1.2740929127 -0.9129585028 -1.5883035660 0.1826268584 0.18218149
University of Texas - EE - 381
EE381K-11 Wireless Symposium Prof. T. S. Rappaport Presenter: _ Title of Talk: _ Significance: Assess the significance of the topic addressed in the paper. None Below Average Average Above Average ExcellentContribution: What is the value of the con
Toledo - FIS - 1325
DIALOGTRAINING SEMINARIntroduction to DIALOG Featuring DialogClassicAllison Evatt Graduate Education Program 2007 The Dialog CorporationAgenda Introduction to DIALOG Planning and Conducting the Search Modifying and Enhancing a Search Ba
Toledo - FIS - 1325
FIS 1325 Online Information RetrievalWinter, 2008 Sections 0103 and 0104 Mike McCaffrey Faculty of Information Science University of TorontoLecture 8February 26th, 2008 (Section 0104) February 28th, 2008 (Section 0103)Online Search Service Admi
University of Texas - LEITL - 56421
Copyright by Lisa Leit 2008The Dissertation Committee for Lisa Leit certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation:Conversational Narcissism in Marriage: Effects on Partner Mental Health and Marital Quality Over the Tra
Milwaukee School of Engineering - CS - 280
Getting started programming the Atmel ATmega32 in assembly using AVRStudioby Dr.-Ing. Joerg Mossbrucker EECS Department Milwaukee School of Engineering August 20, 2005 Modified by: Professor Barnekow March 9, 2007Dr. Taylor March 12, 2007This ma
Allan Hancock College - INFS - 3202
INFS3202 / INFS7202 Web Information SystemLecture Note 11 Advanced Issue I Web 2.0 and BlogosphereBy Gabriel Fung, PhD School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering The University Of QueenslandWhat is Web 2.0? Web 2.0 is NOT a
East Los Angeles College - LJ - 562
-0.012177 -0.012285 -0.012281 0.870324 0.533198 -0.557734 -0.894769 -0.012288 0.870325 0.533289 -0.557566 -0.894652 -0.012178 -0.012330 1.755590 1.080377 -1.104768 -1.779863 -0.012310 -0.012438 0.871211 0.871177 0.533647 0.533865 -0.558513 -0.558129
Neumont - CSC - 1977
R.C.SLA REINEOBRIEN591Her Majesty The QueenandAppellantMartin Edward OBrien1976 DecemberLaskinRespondent131977June24RitchiePresentC.J and DicksonMartland JudsonBeetz and deSpencePigeonGrandpr JJON APPEAL FROM
University of Texas - A - 301
Angstrom Astronomical Unit , Light-Years, and ParsecsConvenient `natural' units for different quantities1 Angstrom (A) = Diameter of a Hyrogen atom = 1.0 x 10-10 m 1 Astronomical Unit (AU) = Distance between Earth and Sun = 1.5 x 1011 m 1 light-yea
East Los Angeles College - LJ - 310
0.0087922271 0.0087115159 0.2875901461 -0.7298022509 -0.7303084731 0.2923392951 0.9222590923 -0.2751356065 -0.9035328627 -0.2734985650 0.7477506995 0.7426751852 0.0064405808 0.0064615863 0.5815694332 1.8579562902 0.5710583925 -1.4844497442 -1.4915895
East Los Angeles College - LJ - 310
0.406462 0.400363 0.688448 -0.335853 -0.336606 0.681562 1.319750 0.123795 -0.509645 0.119170 1.145271 1.148339 0.406133 0.391663 0.959849 2.251514 0.971783 -1.095942 -1.095025 1.897826 1.905858 -0.172845 -1.447108 -0.176511 0.399498 0.680830 1.330611
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS196 IntroductiontoComputer Programming:CNorkaLucena norka@ecs.syr.eduSummerSessionII SyracuseUniversity TueJuly13,2004 Overviewscanf andprintf functions getcharandputcharfunctions Constants Controlstructures HelpCPS196SummerSession
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: C Norka Lucena norka@ecs.syr.eduSummer Session II Syracuse University Thu July 08, 2004 OverviewReview of Identifiers and Variables Basic Data Types Expressions Operators Modularity Introdu
Adelphi - MTP - 656
StatisticsPhyllis Caruth Little Rock Central High School Little Rock, Arkansas Herb Kasube Bradley University Peoria, Illinois Lisa Honeyman Newton South High School Newton, Massachusetts Jim Kiernan Edward R. Murrow High School Brooklyn, New York
East Los Angeles College - LJ - 310
-0.505357 -0.497793 -0.216590 -1.244088 -1.244088 -0.216591 0.413153 -0.787285 -1.422399 -0.787286 0.238404 0.238405 -0.504965 -0.487009 0.081190 1.350628 0.081191 -1.995069 -1.995070 1.000556 1.000557 -1.069070 -2.358775 -1.069072 -0.496772 -0.20145
Syracuse - HW - 504
Intro to C+ SUMMER 2003 CIS 504HW No. 6 (HW_alqabandi.doc)Architecture Concept Document for a Binary Tree Program Performed by Jassim Alqabandi Student ID: 102598650 Presented to Mr. Jamshid Rahman Date: 7/1/2003Table of Contents1. Introduction
Oregon State - BA - 453
HRM Dimensions of Manager's Role16.6 16.6 16.6 16.6 16.6 16.6
St. Augustine NC - PHYS - 1112
PHYSICS 1111 Error (Uncertainty) Analysis I. Types of Experimental Error No physical measurements can be made to infinitely high precision; therefore an estimate of error must be included with each measurement. In the collection of data, two types of
Purdue - EE - 255
Makeup Homework #1 ECE255 F06 Name_ OPTIONAL-ONLY ADDS TO HW GRADE-NO PENALTY IF NOT DONE20 PTS The JFET has VP =-5 V and IDSS = 250 !A/V2 and !n = 0. Choose R1, R2, R3, R4 so that the voltage across R3 equals the voltage across R4 equals the drain
Neumont - CSC - 1978
728ROBILLARDTHE QUEENS.C.RMichelandRobillardAppellantHer Majesty The Queen1978PresentRespondentMarchLaskin141978MayMartland RitchiePratteC.J andSpencePigeon DicksonBeetz Estey andJJON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
Texas State - CH - 5329
CS5329 Algorithm Design and Analysis Fall 2006 Contact Information: Instructor Carol Hazlewood Office Hours:Day Tme Monday 3:00 4:30 Tuesday Wednesday Thursday 1:00 2:30 3:00 4:30 1:00 2:30 other times by appointment Friday by appt.Office Nueces 2
Oregon State - BA - 453
DESIGN AN EMPLOYMENT SCREENING PROCEDURE TASK: Select which selection tools to use and in what order for each of the jobs listed below. Justify your design based on the effectiveness considerations below. Employment Selection Methods 1. Health Condit
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: CSummer Session II Syracuse University July, 2004JULY 13 , 2004THLAB 02 In this session you will program by yourself solutions to some of the textbook problems. Please, solve problems 5 to 7 fr
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: C Norka Lucena norka@ecs.syr.eduSummer Session II Syracuse University July 2004 OverviewCourse setup Basics of programming Introduction to C Variables Identifiers CPS196 Summer Session
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: CSummer Session II Syracuse University July, 2004HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT 01JULY 08 , 2004THCOMPOUND INTEREST CALCULATORWrite a program that calculates the compound interest on an
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: CSummer Session II Syracuse University July, 2004HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT 02JULY 20 , 2004THARRAY SORTERWrite a program to sort an array whose values are taken in from the user. Let the array size
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: CSummer Session II Syracuse University July, 2004AUGUST 03 , 2004RDLAB 09 This lab session is about structures, data structures, and dynamic memory allocation. STRUCTURESSolve these problems
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: CSummer Session II Syracuse University July, 2004JULY 20 , 2004THLAB 05 This lab session is about array. There are some programs for you to test and understand. Then you will do some of your ow
Syracuse - SC - 196
CPS 196 Introduction to Computer Programming: CSummer Session II Syracuse University July, 2004JULY 22 , 2004THLAB 06 This lab session is about multidimensional arrays and pointer. MULTIDIMENSIONAL ARRAYSExercises 4 and 5, page 298.Ple
Oregon State - BA - 453
ORGANIZATIONAL ASSESSMENT Organization Name: _ Location: _Date:_ Respondent Name & Position: _ Describe the degree to which the organization and its managers: Scale: 1-Very High/Common/Frequent; 3- Moderate; 5- Low or Non-Existent General 1. 2. 3. 4.
Oregon State - BA - 453
TEAM AGREEMENTS & NORMS 1. GOAL CLARIFICATION. Agree on where we are heading before we start the trip. Prior to task performance and on a need basis thereafter, the goal or purpose of the teams work will be clarified and specifically stated to insure
Neumont - CSC - 1913
Supreme Court of Canada Mahomed v. Anchor Fire and Marine Ins. Co., 48 S.C.R. 546 Date: 1913-10-22 Mary Mahomed (Plaintiff) Appellant; and The Anchor Fire and Marine Insurance Company (Defendants) Respondents.1913: October 17, 21, 22. Present: Sir C
McGill - COMP - 102
Extraterrestrial and Underwater Extraterrestrial and Underwater RoboticsIoannis Rekleitis School of Computer Science, McGill UniversityWhy RoboticsMars Exploration Rover animation p Underwater exploration, BarbadosRoomba vacuuming robot in a
Oregon State - BA - 453
Basic Tools of Engagement in HRM 1. Strategy. Desired outcomes such as high performance, low costs and liability, sustainability, safety, quality, equity, and employee/customer satisfaction need to be determined and aligned with the overall business
University of Texas - ENGR - 1990
Thermal Properties of PowdersSamuel Xue and 1. W. Barlow Chemical Engineering Department University of Texas at AustinAbstract This paper presents measurements of the specific heats of various powders, including nylon, ABS, PVC, and two kinds of w
NJIT - IS - 677
Chapter 5E-Business and ECommerceInformation Technology For Management 6th EditionTurban, Leidner, McLean, Wetherbe Lecture Slides by L. Beaubien, Providence CollegeJohn Wiley & Sons, Inc.Chapter 5 1Learning ObjectivesDescribe electronic
Oregon State - BA - 453
BA 453 CASE ANALYSIS & DISCUSSION This assignment is part of your class participation, as stated in the syllabus. Each group will be assigned one case and will be responsible for presenting their analysis to the class (40 minutes with be allotted) a
Oregon State - BA - 453
EVALUATION OF CLASS CONTRIBUTION Name_ Term/Section No._ Group No._ Recognizing that my perceptions of your class contributions may not be entirely accurate, I invite your self-evaluation. Be prepared to share your evaluation with fellow students in
Neumont - CSC - 1913
Supreme Court of Canada Mahomed v. Anchor Fire and Marine Ins. Co., 48 S.C.R. 546 Date: 1913-10-22 Mary Mahomed (Plaintiff) Appellant; and The Anchor Fire and Marine Insurance Company (Defendants) Respondents.1913: October 17, 21, 22. Present: Sir C
Oregon State - BA - 453
FIRST EXAM ESSAY QUESTIONS (HRM/BA 453/553 SPRING 05) Instructions: Limit your response to one single-spaced page typed (two pages for graduate students).QUESTION NO. 1 Design an employment selection (not recruitment) procedure for the Dean of a U
Allan Hancock College - ELEC - 3200
3e30221Empirically it is found that the constant Ib curves in the active region of the Ic-Vce plot extrapolate to meet at a common point, VA, (approximately) at the Vce axis. VA is known as the Early voltage, a SPICE parameter for modelling the I-V
Neumont - EN - 1889
Supreme Court of Canada Higgins v. Walkem, 17 S.C.R. 225 Date: 1889-06-14 David W. Higgins (Defendant) Appellant ; and The Honorable George Anthony Walkem (Plaintiff) Respondent.1888: October 22; 1888; October 23; 1888: October 24; 1889: June 14. Pr
Neumont - EN - 1904
Supreme Court of Canada Clark v. City of Vancouver, 35 S.C.R. 121 Date: 1904-06-08 William C. Clark (Plaintiff) Appellant; and The City of Vancouver (Defendant) Respondent.1904: May 26; 1904: June 08 Present: Sedgewick, Girouard, Davies, Nesbitt and
East Los Angeles College - LJ - 310
-0.000080 -0.001794 0.281060 -0.743355 -0.744768 0.284188 0.917503 -0.281026 -0.917477 -0.284542 0.744356 0.743323 0.001907 -0.001504 0.575445 1.855162 0.567132 -1.500514 -1.505722 1.505083 1.500561 -0.566771 -1.854937 -0.576011 0.001971 0.290671 0.9
Milwaukee School of Engineering - MYWEB - 423
Dr. S. ReyerWeek 3 Day 1EE-423 Digital Signal Processing 2Single Sideband Communications (SSB)Single Sideband, or a variation, called Vestigial Sideband, is used in many communications applications. In High Definition Television (HDTV), and Dig
Neumont - EN - 1904
Supreme Court of Canada Clark v. City of Vancouver, 35 S.C.R. 121 Date: 1904-06-08 William C. Clark (Plaintiff) Appellant; and The City of Vancouver (Defendant) Respondent.1904: May 26; 1904: June 08 Present: Sedgewick, Girouard, Davies, Nesbitt and
Syracuse - CSE - 784
CSE 784 - Software StudioFall 2001Software Studio Midterm Examination Critical Analysis of a ProjectInstructions: This is a take home examination. Please finish and submit by Monday, 05 November.You are required to perform a critical review of
Johns Hopkins - DATA - 1963
Scoring Rubric, A&S Certification InternshipRUBRIC: OVERALL ORGANIZATION/GRAMMAR/SPELLING (5 points) Required Indicator Organization (_/1 pt.) Distinguished Proficient Information is well organized Information is organized, but with well-constructe
East Los Angeles College - FILES - 1955
SOFTWARE LABORATORY WORKSTATION USAGE Trinity Term 2009Day MON M/Cs 9am CAD-A CAD-B 379 CAD-A CAD-B 379 CAD-A CAD-B 379 CAD-A CAD-B 379 CAD-A CAD-B 379 C+ C+ C+ IP2 C.Arch. WEEK ONE 11am 2pm 4pm 9am WEEK TWO 11am 2pm IP1 IP1 4pmTUEC+C+C+WE
University of Texas - A - 408
This is a list of practice problems for the final exam. They all come from the chapter reviews at the end of each chapter. Chapter 1 Review Concept Check: 3,4,6,7,8,9,10,11 True-False Quiz: 1,2,3,4,5,6 Exercises: 1,2,3,5-8,11-20 Chapter 2 Review Conc
East Los Angeles College - FILES - 1955
Sheet1SOFTWARE LABORATORY WORKSTATION USAGE HILARY TERM 2009Day MON M/Cs 9am CAD-A CAD-B 379 TUE CAD-A CAD-B 379 WED CAD-A CAD-B 379 THUR CAD-A CAD-B 379 FRI CAD-A CAD-B 379 SoftVer ConcPr1 ConcPr2 WEEK ONE 11am 2pm 4pm 9am WEEK TWO 11am 2pm 4pm
Milwaukee School of Engineering - MA - 226
MA226 Tech Calc 3Section 101 Spring 2008Review for Unit test #21. Given a polynomial or similar function, calculate the first derivatives, second derivatives and mixed partial derivatives. a.f ( x, y ) = x 3 + 3 x 4 y 5 + y 6b.f ( x, y )
East Los Angeles College - FILES - 1953
MSc PRACTICAL TIMETABLEHilary Term 2009Supervised practical sessions are scheduled for either Room 379 in the Computing Laboratory or the Practicals Laboratory (Room T6.09) in the Thom Building. NB: Please sign up at the beginning of week 1 for the
Milwaukee School of Engineering - MA - 226
MA226 Tech Calc 3 Section 101 Spring 2008 Unit test #2 April 21, 2008Name:_1. Given f ( x, y ) = e x cos( y ) + e x sin( y ) , calculate both first partial derivatives and all four second partial derivatives. 2. Given f ( x, y ) = x sin( xy )
East Los Angeles College - FILES - 2217
Visualising Memory Graphs: Interactive Debugging using J ava3DDarius Bradbury May 19, 2008AbstractThis report. df'A"iCribes a new way of visualising Java run-time objects, and t.heir a,'>sociated memory graphs. Using the Eclipse debugging frame