【视频】电路与电子学 15 Second-order systems
Circuits and Electronics-Second-order systems-r5Jf7g,m(_g7lf8y"wInstructor: Prof. Anant Agarwal
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[b]Course Description[/b]
Circuits and Electronics is designed to serve as a first course in an undergraduate electrical engineering (EE), or electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) curriculum. At MIT, 6.002 is in the core of department subjects required for all undergraduates in EECS.
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The course introduces the fundamentals of the lumped circuit abstraction. Topics covered include: resistive elements and networks; independent and dependent sources; switches and MOS transistors; digital abstraction; amplifiers; energy storage elements; dynamics of first- and second-order networks; design in the time and frequency domains; and analog and digital circuits and applications. Design and lab exercises are also significant components of the course. 6.002 is worth 4 Engineering Design Points. The 6.002 content was created collaboratively by Profs. Anant Agarwal and Jeffrey H. Lang.
The course uses the required textbook Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits. Agarwal, Anant, and Jeffrey H. Lang. San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Elsevier, July 2005. ISBN: 9781558607354.k_Y-ac6c&u)n#q
【观看视频】(因网络原因,有时需耐心等待5-10秒以上时间)
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【下载讲义】
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[attach]667[/attach] 演讲文本3s[N#D\9nl!f S J ^
Transcript - Lecture 15 t {/\2c9U-{%M
Before I begin today, I thought I would take the first five minutes and show you some fun stuff I have been hacking on for the past three years. This has to do with 6.002 and circuits and all that stuff, but this is completely optional, this is for fun, this is to go build your intuition, this is to check your answers, whatever you want.W6|iNGOl?~4D
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This is not a required part of the course. Just for fun. There is this URL out here that I put down here. I have been hacking on this system for the past three years, and for the first time this year and very tentatively and gingerly introducing it to students.gmN D&D7jB,k
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The idea here is that it is a, that is kind of defocused. Any chance of focusing that a little bit better? The idea of this is that it is a Web-based interactive simulation package that I have pulled together.&t3d4ne dy e$d
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And what you can do is you can pull up a bunch of circuits. Notice that the URL is up here. It is euryale.lcs.mit.edu/websim. And there is the pointer to it. So you have a bunch of fun things you can play with.3Z:fg/JE{f xk/ug8F;}
And we have gone through all of these things in lecture. Let's pick the MOSFET amplifier. You come to this page. This is something you have seen in class. And let's play with this little circuit.,sI$Ur*mMZ'X f
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And you see the mouse? Good. You can set up a bunch of parameters. You can set up the MOSFET parameters VT and K. You can set up the value of R for your resistor, you can establish a bias voltage, and you can have an input voltage vIN.:X8K!@5Aht
So you can apply a bunch of input voltages. You can apply a zero input, unit in pulse, unit step, sine wave, square waves. Or this was the part that took me the longest to get right. You can also input a bunch of music.
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And so far I just have two clips, so you are going to get bored listening to them. Good. So you can also input music. And what you can do is you can watch the waveforms, you can listen to the output and do a bunch of fun stuff.x*y^-Z)|v [@1c
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One experiment I would love for you guys to try out. Again, remember, this is completely optional. Just for fun. You can apply some input. Step input, for example, to an RLC circuit and spend 30 seconds thinking about what should the output look like.
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I divine that the output should look like this and then do this and see if what you thought was correct. And it's fun to kind of play around with it. Let me start with, just as an example, let's say I input classical music.
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And let us say I would like to listen to the output here that is the voltage at the drain terminal of the MOSFET. For listening it sets up a default timeframe to listen to, so you go ahead and do it.
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This shows you the time domain waveform of a clip of the music and then you can listen to it. Lot's of distortion, right? As you can see, there is a bunch of distortion. And that is as you expect because the peak-to-peak voltage is 1 volt, the bias is 2.5, and so this is clipping at the lower end, plus the MOSFET is nonlinear. T0O)q3m&z]&{
You can play around with a bunch of things and you can have a lot of fun. And the reason I created this is that MIT is putting a bunch of its courses on the Web. And one of the hottest things about courses like this is the lab component.3bHvPN
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If you are beaming a course to, say, a Third World country or something, how do you get people to set up the massive lab infrastructure? I know you hate your oscilloscopes, I know you hate your wires, I know you hate the clips, but the fact is you have them.Ai'g:sA'Q{
I know a lot of places those are way too expensive to pull together, which is why I have been creating this Web-based kind of interactive laboratory so that people can learn this stuff over the Web.mP k} i&M
Let's go do another example very quickly. Let's say you learned about, well, let's do RC circuits. Here is the parallel RC circuit. And you can set up capacitor values, resistor values, you can set up input.
Here, let me look at the time domain waveform for the voltage across the capacitor. And this time around let me play a unit step. And let's see what the output is going to look like. You can think in your minds what should the output look like, and then you can go and plot it.N(I:W:KT Yvnhp9aK
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There you go. That's what the output looks like. So you can play around with it and have fun. That's all the good news. The bad news is that so far I just have one Pentium III machine behind us.
It is a Linux box, so don't all of you try it at once. However, what I have also done, and that took me another six months of hacking in the small amount of time professors have to hack on stuff, I've hacked an incredibly elaborate cashing system so that once anyone in class tries out some combination of parameters it goes and squirrels away all the outputs.
If anybody else types in the same sets of parameters it will just get all the output and play it back to you. So if enough of you play with over time, we may end up cashing all the important waveforms and music clips and all of that stuff.
I have allocated a few gigabytes of storage, so I am hoping that it may work. Go forth. Play with it. And this is completely my fault, so if there are any bugs or anything simply email them to me.E1c)W9a-y G
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This is the first time this is coming alive so bear with it. Now let me switch back to the scheduled presentation for today. All right, hope and pray that this works. Yes. Good. I am going to do today's lecture using view graphs.8[2d5cv1xJ
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And the reason I am going to do that and not do my usual blackboard presentation which I way, way, way prefer to a view graph presentation. The only reason I am going to do this for today, and maybe one more lecture, is that there is just a huge amount of math grunge in this lecture.2ueC]r@q
What I want to do is kind of blast through that, but you will have it all in the notes that you have, so that you don't waste time in class as you watch me stumbling over twiddles and tildes and all that stuff.
The key thing here is that the insight is actually very simple. The beginning and the end are connected very tightly and very simple. There is a bunch of math grunge in the middle that we are going to work through and, again, follows a complete old established pattern."dU\#vU`
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So, in that sense, there is really nothing dramatically new in there. Let me spend the next five minutes reviewing for you how we got here, what have we covered so far and set up the presentation. The first ten view graphs I am going to blast through and just tell you where we are in terms of LC and RLC circuits.tl,]I|!dV(O
I began by showing you this little demo, two inverters, one driving. I can model the inductance here with a little inductor, the capacitor of the gate here. And recall that when I wanted to speed this up by introducing a 50 ohm smaller resistance, I got some really strange behavior.
Just to remind you, for Tuesday's lecture it would help if you quickly reviewed the appendix on complex algebra in the course notes. Remember all the real and imaginary j and omega stuff? It would be good to very quickly skim through that.
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It is a couple of pages. Remember this demo? And the relevant circuit that is of interest to us is this one here. It is the resistor, there is the inductor and there is a capacitor. This is Page 3.
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I am just going to blast through the first ten view graphs. It is all old stuff. Then we observed the following output. We applied this input at VA and we got this output, a very slowly rising waveform because of the RC transient.
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And because of that you saw a delay. Notice that this delay was because of the slowly rising transient. This waveform took some time to hit the threshold of the neighboring transistor. So we say ah-ha, let's try to speed this sucker up by reducing the resistance in the collector of the first inverter.
And so I had this input. Now, to my surprise, instead of seeing a nice little much higher and much faster transitioning circuit, well, I did see a much faster transitioning circuit but I got all this strange behavior on the output that I was interested in.o t|(?-@(D1{@
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And because of that, if these excursions were low enough, I could actually trigger the output and get a whole bunch of false ones here because of these negative excursions which should not really be there.
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That was kind of strange. In the last lecture we said let's take this one step at a time. Let's not jump into an RLC circuit. Let's go step by step. Let's start with an LC, understand the behavior.t_ u5P:`5J
We started off with an LC circuit of this sort, and using the node equation we showed that this was the equation that governed the behavior of the circuit. And then we said that for a step input and for zero initial conditions, that is the zero state response, let's find out what the output, the voltage across the capacitor looks like.
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And so we obtained the total solution to be this. And there was a sinusoidal term in there. And the omega nought which was one by square root of LC. And this was the circuit. And so for this step input notice that the output looked like this.[*qD(ZQ%{(m0y9}l
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So far an input step I had an output that went like this. Notice that it is indeed possible for the output voltage to actually go above the input value VI. This is kind of non-intuitive but this can happen.P#B+a"d}.Z!s n
So this waveform jumps up and down. But the steady state value, on average if you will, is VI. On the other hand, it does have sinusoidal excursions and this kind of goes on because there is nothing to dissipate the energy inside that circuit.Q*c;N!v8J
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By the way, the fact that the capacitor voltage shoots above the input voltage is actually a very important property. We won't dwell on it in 6.002, but just squirrel that away in your brain somewhere.
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I promise you that some time in your life you will have to create a little design somewhere that will need a higher voltage than your DC input. And you can use this primitive fact to actually produce a DC voltage higher than you are given, and then use that somehow.#W#h$D(v-i&L
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In fact, there is a whole research area of what are called DC to DC converters, voltage converters. Let's say you have 1.5 volt battery, a AA battery, but let's say a circuit needs 1.8 volts. The Pentium IIIs, for example, needed 1.8 volts.*Nj:|9gy