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Electronic Circuit Diagrams

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Presentation on theme: "Electronic Circuit Diagrams"— Presentation transcript:

1 Electronic Circuit Diagrams
Chapter 5 Electronic Circuit Diagrams

2 Introduction This chapter covers the following topics:
Schematic symbols Schematic diagram Breadboarding

3 Schematic Symbols Represent electrical devices in a schematic diagram for an electric circuit International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) Responsible for keeping symbols current Removing old symbols Adding new ones

4 Schematic Symbols (cont’d.)
Symbols may vary between countries Much standardization exists Several international standards American (MIL/ANSI) symbols used in the text Symbols may differ based on drawing type

5 Schematic Symbols (cont’d.)
Symbols followed with a reference designator : Used to identify a component One or two letters followed by a number One or two letters followed by a number and a letter Indicates component with several sections tied to a common point

6 Figure 5-1 Architectural electrical symbols. © 2014 Cengage Learning

7 Figure 5-2 Symbols used for an electronics schematic diagram
Figure 5-2 Symbols used for an electronics schematic diagram. © 2014 Cengage Learning

8 Schematic Diagram Basic reference for a circuit
Gives all necessary specifications Circuit block diagram Shows how component blocks are connected Analog schematics appear different from digital schematics

9 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Tight component grouping of analog components Important to show in schematic diagram Digital circuits have many common signals Common signals are labeled Not every connection is shown as a line

10 Figure 5-6 Label common signals in digital circuits.
© 2014 Cengage Learning.

11 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Show entire circuit in as few drawings as possible Techniques Group subcircuit components together Signal flow proceeds from left to right Input on the left, output on the right Highest voltage at the top of the drawing

12 Figure 5-7 Signal flows from left to right; voltage potential has highest potential at top. © 2014 Cengage Learning

13 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Techniques (cont’d.) Signal lines should cross as little as possible Label components starting at top left Move down and back to the top, repeating across schematic Critical leads should be short or isolated from other signals

14 Figure 5-8 Use signal abbreviations rather than draw a maze of lines.
© 2014 Cengage Learning.

15 Figure 5-9 Label components starting at the left side and moving top to bottom repeating across the schematic. © 2014 Cengage Learning.

16 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Techniques (cont’d.) : Clearly indicate external components and connectors Label IC pins, including power supply inputs Tie unused IC logic gates or extra subcircuit inputs to the appropriate power supply level Include any extra components added during the construction process

17 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Variable components Include an arrow as part of their symbol Arrows pointing away from a symbol: Indicate it is giving off energy Arrows pointing toward a symbol: Indicate it is receiving energy Letter symbols used to identify leads

18 Figure 5-10 Schematic symbols for common electronic components
Figure 5-10 Schematic symbols for common electronic components. © 2014 Cengage Learning

19 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Ground symbols Symbol A: chassis or earth ground Most common ground symbol Symbol B: chassis ground only Figure 5-11 Ground symbols. © 2014 Cengage Learning.

20 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Crossing lines does not indicate connection Dots indicate connection occurs Figure 5-12 Schematic drawing lines © 2014 Cengage Learning

21 Schematic Diagram (cont’d.)
Tools to create schematic diagrams Common drafting tools Computer aided design Electronic circuit simulation programs Multisim Circuit Wizard

22 Breadboarding Breadboard :
Platform for building prototype electronic circuit Essential step to prove a circuit design works Solderless breadboards Developed in 1971 Allow circuits to be assembled and altered quickly or

23 Breadboarding (cont’d.)
Virtual breadboarding Assembling and testing a circuit using circuit simulation programs or


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