Regulator circuit, The negative voltage regulator, Figure 5 figure 6 figure 7 – Elenco Digital / Analog Trainer Kit Version User Manual

Page 24

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In practice, the current through the diodes is not as shown in Figure 2C.
Because capacitor C1 has a charge after the first cycle, the diode will not
conduct until the positive AC voltage exceeds the positive charge in the
capacitor. Figure 5 shows a better picture of what the current flow looks
like assuming no loss in the diode. It takes a few cycles for the voltage to
build up on the capacitor. This depends on the resistance of the winding
and the diode.

After the initial start-up, there will be a charge and

discharge on the capacitor depending on the current drawn by the output
load. Remember, current only flows through the diode when the anode is
more positive than the cathode. Thus, current will flow in short bursts as
shown in Figure 5.

The DC load current may be one ampere, but the peak diode current may be three times that. Therefore, the
diode rating must be sufficient to handle the peak current. The 1N4001 has a peak current rating of 10 amps.

REGULATOR CIRCUIT

The regulator circuit in the power supply consists of a LM-317 integrated circuit.

This IC is specially designed to perform the regulation function. Figure 6 shows

a simplified circuit of how the LM-317 IC works.

Transistors Q1 and Q2 form a circuit known as a differential amplifier. The base
of transistor Q1 is connected to a stable 1.5V reference voltage. The base of
Q2 is connected to the regulator output circuit through a voltage divider
network. The collector of transistor Q2 is connected to a current source. This
basically is a PNP transistor biased to draw about 1mA of current. Transistor
Q2 sees the current source as a very high resistor of about 1 meg ohms. Thus,
the gain of transistor Q2 is extremely high.

Transistor Q5 is called the pass transistor. It controls the current reaching the output. Transistor Q3 and Q4 are
emitter followers. Their function is to raise the impedance of the pass transistor. Note that transistors Q2, Q3,
Q4, Q5 and resistor R1 form a closed loop. Also, note that the feedback to the base of Q2 is negative, that is,
when the base of Q2 goes positive, the output at emitter Q5 goes negative. Now if the 2 volt output voltage
goes down because of current drain at the output, the base of Q2 will drop, forcing the collector voltage to go
higher. This will bring the output voltage back to 2 volts. This is the basis of all negative feedback regulators.

Another feature of the LM-317 regulator if to protect the IC against overload and output shorts. If the IC is
overloaded, the junction of an overload transistor will overheat. A transistor will sense this overheating and shut
down transistor Q5.

The LM-317 IC is basically a 1.25 volt regulator. To be able to vary the output
from 1.25V to 20V, we stack the IC on the a DC voltage as shown in Figure 7.
When VR1 equals 0, the output voltage is 1.25 volts as determined by the LM-
317 IC. Note that the voltage across VR1 will equal the 1.25 volts across R1,
therefore the output voltage will be 2.5 volts. When VR1 is 5 times R1, the
output voltage is 6.25 volts. As you can see, varying resistor VR1 will vary the
voltage from 1.25 volts to 20 volts.

THE NEGATIVE VOLTAGE REGULATOR

The theory of the negative regulator is the same as the previously discussed positive regulator. The basic
difference is that diodes D1 and D3 are reversed, producing a negative voltage across capacitor C1. The LM-
317 IC is designed to operate from a negative supply.

Figure 5

Figure 6

Figure 7

A) Transformer

Winding

B) Voltage C1

C) Current

through diodes

20V

Peak

20V

2V

Output

R1

R2

Divider

Q1

Q2

1.5V

Q3

Q4

Q5

Current
Source
Equalized
to 1 Meg.

1.25 - 15V

R1

VR1

LM-317

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