IOBLOCKS
Monday, 5 May 2014
Build a simple Transistor Curve Tracer using an Arduino and Processing
The theory
The Implementation
The Arduino code
Since the Processing code is somewhat more involved, you can download it from GitHub from the link at the end of this article. The raw data gives us the following curve:
This is a plot of the raw data from the Arduino — but is really only useful for understanding exactly this configuration (with these exact resistors). However it does show you that you have an inverting amplifier.
Calculating using the values of the two resistors allows us to determine the current and get Ib / Vc and Ib / Ic plots
Results
Improvements
When the second edge is asserted, the resistor must be high enough to allow the device to override the CPU’s outputs.
To use the MCP4131 you can download and install the MCP4131 library. I thought I was going to have to write it — but it is quite a simple library.
Use of the MCP4131
Since I had to write changes to the Arduino code to use the MCP4131, I also modified it to do a single sweep of the Potentiometer (with tapValue from 0 to 128) and then stop until it received a “G” on the serial port.
Then I modified the Processing code to send the G when the user requested for a new graph to be drawn.
5 comments:
Tried this . works perfectly.. thank you very much .
Thanks for sharing. Very simple Arduino setup, only a potentiometer and a resistor! I’ve solved some minor problems encountered using Windows and Processing 3.0:
1) as already stated change the com port string into:
myPort = new Serial(this,»COMn»,9600);
where COMn maybe for example COM7 or COM11: refer to your Arduino IDE environment to see on which COM port Arduino is attached to.
2) In processing 3.0 I cannot load/find the «Baskerville. » font and so I generated a new font from «Tools» menu and then create New Font (I’ve used Dialog.plain-18.vlw) and copied this into CurveTracer program directory;
3) Modify the «if» condition as
OLD VERSION: if (stArr.length != 4) <
NOW IS: if (stArr.length != 3) <
4) in «void draw()» routine I added a «delay(200);» instruction after all the «if (key == . )» instructions.
Change also all that Capital letters with lowercase ones (e.g. «C» ==>»c», «B»==>»b» and so on);
According these few MODS now everithing works properly.
Bye!
Marco
One more thing. in the Fritzing picture of this simpple project mind that a NPN transistor may have different EBC pin positions.
For example common transistor BC547B in his TO-226AA case has pins «inverted» compared to that of the picture.
Transistor Curve Tracer
Introduction: Transistor Curve Tracer
I’ve always wanted a transistor curve tracer. It’s the best way of understanding what a device does.Having built and used this one, I finally understand the difference between the various flavours of FET.
- matching transistors
- measuring the gain of bipolar transistors
- measuring the threshold of MOSFETs
- measuring the cutoff of JFETs
- measuring the forward voltage of diodes
- measuring the breakdown voltage of Zeners
- and so on.
I was very impressed when I bought one of the wonderful LCR-T4 testers by Markus Frejek and others but I wanted it to tell me more about the components so I started to design my own tester.
I began by using the same screen as the LCR-T4 but it doesn’t have a high enough resolution so I changed to a 320×240 2.8″ LCD. It happens to be a colour touch-screen which is nice. The curve tracer runs on an Arduino Pro Mini 5V Atmega328p 16MHz and is powered by 4 AA cells.
Step 1: How to Use It
When you switch on the curve tracer, the main menu screen is displayed.
Select the kind of device by touching one of «PNP NPN», «MOSFET» or «JFET». You can test diodes in the «PNP NPN» mode.
Put the Device Under Test (DUT) into the ZIF socket. The menu screen shows you which pins to use. PNPs, p-channel MOSFETS and n-channel JFETS go in the left side of the socket. NPNs, n-channel MOSFETS and p-channel JFETS go in the right side of the socket. Close the ZIF socket.
After a second or so, the tester will realise that it has a component and will start to draw the curves.
For a PNP or NPN transistor it plots Vce (the voltage between the collector and emitter) versus the current flowing into the collector. A line is drawn for each different base current — e.g. 0uA, 50uA, 100uA, etc. The gain of the transistor is shown at the top of the screen.
For a MOSFET it plots Vds (the voltage between the drain and source) versus the current flowing into the drain. A line is drawn for each different gate voltage — 0V, 1V, 2V, etc. The turn-on threshold of the FET is shown at the top of the screen.
For a JFET it plots Vds (the voltage between the drain and source) versus the current flowing into the drain. A line is drawn for each different gate voltage — 0V, 1V, 2V, etc. With depletion JFETs, current flows when the gate voltage is equal to the source voltage. As the gate voltage is changed to be further from the drain voltage, the JFET turns off. The cut-off threshold of the FET is shown at the top of the screen.
The most interesting part of a MOSFET or JFET curve is around the turn-on or cut-off voltage plus or minus a few hundred mV. In the main menu, touch the Setup button and the Setup screen will be shown. You can select the minimum and maximum gate voltage: more curves will be drawn in that region.
For a PNP or NPN transistor, the Setup screen allows you to select the minimum and maximum base current
With diodes, you can see the forward voltage and with Zeners, the reverse breakdown voltage. In the image above, I’ve combined the curves of several diodes.
Step 2: How It Works
Let’s consider an NPN transistor. We’re going to draw a graph of the voltage between the collector and emitter (x-axis is Vce) versus the current flowing into the collector (y-axis is Ic). We’ll draw one line for each different base current (Ib) — e.g. 0uA, 50uA, 100uA, etc.
The emitter of the NPN is connected to 0V and the collector is connected to a 100ohm «load resistor» and then to a voltage that slowly increases. A DAC controlled by the Arduino sweeps that test voltage from 0V to 12V (or until the current through the load resistor reaches 50mA). The Arduino measures the voltage between the collector and emitter and the voltage across the load resistor and draws a graph.
This is repeated for each base current. The base current is generated by a second 0V-to-12V DAC and a 27k resistor. The DAC produces 0V, 1.35V (50uA), 2.7V (100uA), 4.05V (150uA), etc. (Actually, the voltage has to be a little higher because of Vbe — assumed to be 0.7V.)
For a PNP transistor, the emitter is connected to 12V and the collector is connected to a 100ohm load resistor and then to a voltage that slowly decreases from 12V to 0V. The base current DAC steps down from 12V.
An n-channel enhancement MOSFET is similar to an NPN. The source is connected to 0V, the load resistor is connected to the drain and to a voltage sweeping from 0V to 12V. The DAC that was controlling the base current now controls the gate voltage and steps 0V, 1V, 2V, etc.
A p-channel enhancement MOSFET is similar to an PNP. The source is connected to 12V, the load resistor is connected to the drain and to a voltage sweeping from 12V to 0V. The gate voltage steps 12V, 11V, 10V, etc.
An n-channel depletion JFET is slightly more difficult. You would normally imagine the source connected to 0V, the drain connected to a varying positive voltage and the gate connected to a varying negative voltage. A JFET normally conducts and is turned off by a negative gate voltage.
The curve tracer can’t generate negative voltages so the n-JFET drain is connected to 12V, the source is connected to a 100ohm load resistor and then to a voltage that slowly decreases from 12V to 0V. We want Vgs (the gate-source voltage) to step from 0V, -1V, -2V, etc. We want Vgs to remain constant as Vds (the drain-source voltage) varies. So the Arduino sets the voltage at the load resistor then adjusts the gate voltage DAC until Vgs is the required value. It then sets a new voltage at the load resistor and again adjusts the gate voltage, etc.
(The curve tracer can’t measure the voltage applied to the gate but it knows what it’s told the DAC to do and that’s accurate enough. Of course, this only measures the negative-gate part of the JFET response; if you want to see the positive-gate part, treat it as a MOSFET.)
A p-channel depletion JFET is treated similarly but the 0-to-12V values are all inverted.
(The curve tracer does not specifically deal with depletion MOSFETs or enhancement JFETs but you could treat them as depletion JFETs and enhancement MOSFETs.)
Once it has completed the graph the curve tracer calculates the gain, threshold or cut-off of the transistor.
For bipolar transistors, the Arduino looks at the average spacing of the horizontal lines of the curves. As it draws the curve for base current, it notes the collector current when Vce is equal to 2V. The change in collector current is divided by the change in base current to give the gain. The gain of a bipolar is a vague concept. It depends on how you measure it. No two makes of multimeter will give the same answer. Generally, all you’re asking is «is the gain high?» or «are these two transistors the same?».
For MOSFETs, the Arduino measures the turn-on threshold. It sets the load voltage to 6V then gradually increases Vgs until the current through the load exceeds 5mA.
For JFETs, the Arduino measures the cut-off voltage. It sets the load voltage to 6V then gradually increases (negative) Vgs until the current through the load is less than 1mA.
Step 3: The Circuit
Here is a brief description of the circuit. A more complete description is in the attached RTF file.
The curve tracer needs three voltages:
- 5V for the Arduino
- 3.3V for the LCD
- 12V for the test circuit
The circuit must convert make these different voltages from the 4 AA cells.
The Arduino is connected to a 2-channel DAC to produce the various test voltages. (I tried using the Arduino PWM as a DAC but it was too noisy.)
The DAC produces voltages in the range 0V to 4.096V. These are converted into 0V to 12V by op-amps. I couldn’t find any through-hole rail to rail op-amps that can source/sink 50mA, so I used an LM358. The output of an LM358 op-amp cannot go higher than 1.5V below its supply voltage (i.e. 10.5V). But we need the full range of 0-12V.
So we use an NPN as an open-collector inverter for the output of the op-amp.
The advantage is that this home-made «open-collector op-amp» output can go right up to 12V. Feedback resistors around the op-amp amplify the 0V to 4V from the DAC to 0V to 12V.
The voltages at the Device-Under-Test (DUT) vary between 0V and 12V. The Arduino ADCs are limited to 0V to 5V. Potential dividers do the conversion.
Between the Arduino and the LCD are potential dividers that drop 5V to 3V. The LCD, the touch screen and the DAC are controlled by the SPI bus.
The curve tracer is powered from 4 AA cells which give 6.5V when new and can be used down to around 5.3V.
The 6V from the cells is dropped to 5V with a very low dropout regulator — a HT7550 (if you don’t have one then a 5V zener and a 22ohm resistor is not too much worse). The current consumption of the 5V supply is around 26mA.
The 6V from the cells is dropped to 3.3V with a low-dropout regulator — the HT7533. The current consumption of the 3.3V supply is around 42mA. (A standard 78L33 would work but it has a 2V dropout so you’d have to throw away your AA cells sooner.)
The 6V from the cells is boosted to 12V with a SMPS (Switched Mode Power Supply). I simply bought a module from eBay. I had real trouble finding a decent converter. The bottom line is, don’t use an XL6009 converter, it’s an absolute menace. As the battery goes flat and falls below 4V the XL6009 goes crazy and produces up to 50V which would fry everything. The good one I used is:
It’s tiny and is about 80% efficient. Its input current consumption is around 5mA when waiting for a DUT to be inserted and momentarily up to 160mA when drawing the curves.
As the AA cells are discharged the voltages vary, the software compensates by using reference voltages. The Arduino measures the 12V supply. The Arduino ADC uses its «5V» supply as a reference voltage but that «5V» is calibrated accurately against the Arduino’s internal 1.1V reference voltage. The DAC has an accurate internal reference voltage.
I like the way the LCR-T4 has a button to turn it on and turns itself off automatically with a timeout. Unfortunately, the circuit introduces a voltage drop which I can’t afford when powering from 4 AA cells. Even re-designing the circuit to use a FET wasn’t sufficient. So I’m using a simple on/off switch.
Attachments
Step 4: The Software
The Arduino sketch is attached here. Compile and upload it to the Pro Mini in the usual way. There are lots of descriptions of how to upload programs on the web and in other Instructables.
The sketch starts by drawing the main menu then waits for you to insert a component or touch one of the buttons (or send a command from the PC). It tests for component insertion once a second.
It knows you have inserted a component because, with the base/gate voltage set to half way (DAC = 128) and the load resistor voltage set to 0V or 12V, a current of several mA flows through one or other of the load resistors. It knows when the device is a diode because changing the base/gate voltage does not change the load current.
It then draws the appropriate curves and switches the base and load currents off. It then tests once a second until the component is unplugged. It knows the component is unplugged because the load current falls to zero.
The ILI9341 LCD is driven by my own library called «SimpleILI9341». The library is attached here. It has a standard set of drawing commands very similar to all such libraries. Its advantages over other libraries are that it works (some don’t!) and it shares the SPI bus politely with other devices. Some of the «fast» libraries you can download use special timing loops and are upset when other, maye slower, devices are used on the same bus. It’s written in plain C and so has smaller overheads than some libraries. A Windows program is attached which allows you to make your own fonts and icons.
Attachments
Step 5: Serial Comms to PC
The curve tracer can communicate with a PC via a serial link (9600bps, 8-bit, no parity). You will need a suitable USB-to-serial convertor.
The following commands can be sent from the PC to the curve tracer:
- Command ‘N’: trace the curves of an NPN transistor.
- Command ‘P’: trace the curves of a PNP transistor.
- Command ‘F’: trace the curves of an n-MOSFET.
- Command ‘f’: trace the curves of a p-MOSFET.
- Command ‘J’: trace the curves of an n-JFET.
- Command ‘j’: trace the curves of a p-JFET.
- Command ‘D’: trace the curves of a diode on the NPN side of the socket.
- Command ‘d’: trace the curves of a diode on the PNP side of the socket.
- Command ‘A’ nn: set DAC-A to the value nn (nn is a single byte) then return an ‘A’ to the PC. DAC-A controls the load voltage.
- Command ‘B’ nn: set DAC-A to the value nn then return a ‘B’ to the PC. DAC-B controls the base/gate voltage.
- Command ‘X’: continuously send ADC values back to the PC.
- Command ‘M’: show the main menu.
When the curves are traced following one of the commands, the results of the curve are transmitted back to the PC. The format is:
- «n»: start a new plot, draw the axes, etc.
- «m (x),(y),(b)»: move the pen to (x),(y).
- (x) is Vce in integer mV.
- (y) is Ic in integer hundreds on uA (e.g. 123 means 12.3mA).
- (b) is the base current in integer uA
- or (b) is 50 times the gate voltage in integer mV
- «l (x),(y),(b)»: draw a line to pen to (x),(y).
- «z»: the end of this line
- «g (g)»: the end of the scan;
- (g) is the gain, threshold voltage (x10) or the cut-off voltage (x10)
The values sent to the PC are the raw measured values. The Arduino smooths the values before drawing them by avreraging; you should do the same.
When the PC sends an «X» command, The ADC values are returned as integers:
- «x (p),(q),(r),(s),(t),(u)»
- (p) the voltage at the load resistor of the PNP DUT
- (q) the voltage at the collector of the PNP DUT
- (r) the voltage at the load resistor of the NPN DUT
- (s) the voltage at the collector of the NPN DUT
- (t) the voltage of the «12V» supply
- (u) the voltage of the «5V» supply in mV
You could write a PC program to test other devices. Set the DACs to test voltages (using ‘A’ and ‘B’ commands) then see what the ADCs report.
The curve tracer only sends data to the PC after it has received a command as sending data slows down the scan. It also no longer tests for the presence/absence of a component. The only way to turn off the curve tracer is to send an ‘O’ command (or to remove the battery).
A Windows program is attached which demonstrates sending commands to the curve tracer.
Attachments
Step 6: Building the Curve Tracer
Here are the major components that you’ll probably need to buy:
- Arduino Pro Mini 5V 16MHz Atmel328p (£1.30)
- 14pin Zif Socket (£1)
- MCP4802 (£2.50)
- HT7533 (£1)
- LE33CZ (£1)
- IL9341 2.8″ Display (£6)
- 5V to 12V boost Power Supply (£1)
- 4xAA cell battery holder (£0.30)
Search eBay or your favourite supplier. That’s a total of around £14.
I got my display here:
And the boost SMPS here:
The remaining components are things you probably have already:
- BC639 (3 off)
- 100nF (7 off)
- 10uF (2 off)
- 1k (2 off)
- 2k2 (5 off)
- 3k3 (5 off)
- 4k7 (1 off)
- 10k (7 off)
- 27k (1 off)
- 33k (8 off)
- 47k (5 off)
- 68k (2 off)
- 100R (2 off)
- Slide Switch (1 off)
- LM358 (1 off)
- stripboard
- 28-pin IC socket or SIL header
- nuts and bolts
You will need the usual electronics tools — soldering iron, cutters, solder, odd pieces of wire, etc. — and a USB-to-serial convertor to program the Arduino.
The curve tracer is built on stripboard. If you’re the sort of person who wants a curve tracer, you will already know how to lay out stripboard.
The layout I used is shown above. Cyan lines are copper on the back of the stripboard. Red lines are links on the component side or are the extra-long leads of the component. Curved Red lines are flexible wire. Dark blue circles are breaks in the stripboard.
I built it on two boards, each 3.7″ by 3.4″. One board contains the display and the tester circuit; the other board has the battery holder and the 3.3V, 5V and 12V supplies. I kept the low-voltage («5V») and high-voltage («12V») parts of the tester circuit separate with only high-value resistors crossing the frontier.
The two boards and the display form a triple-decker sandwich held together with M2 screws. I cut lengths of plastic tube to act as spacers or you could use ballpoin pen tubes, etc.
I only connected the Arduino Mini pins that I needed and only the ones on the sides (not at the top and bottom ends of the Mini PCB). I used short lengths of wire rather than the usual row of square pins that Arduinos are supplied with (the pins soldered to the PCB are square in the drawing). I wanted the Arduino to be flush against the stripboard because there’s not a lot of height under the display.
The Arduino ProMini pinout is rather variable. The pins on the long edges of the board are fixed but the pins on the short edges differ between suppliers. The layout above assumes a board with the 6 programming pins with Gnd next to the Raw pin and with DTR next to Tx on the long edge. At the other end of the board are a row of 5 pins with 0V next to D9 and A7 next to D10. None of the short-edge pins are soldered into the stripboard so you can use loose wires if your ProMini is different.
Use a SIL header socket to hold the display. Or cut a 28-pin IC socket in half and use the pieces to make a socket for the display. Solder the square pins that are supplied with the display (or came with the Arduino) into the display. They’re too fat to plug into a turned-pin socket — choose a socket that has the «spring clip» kind of pins. Some «spring clip» kind of IC sockets can only withstand half a dozen insertions/removals of the LCD so try to find good ones in your component drawer.
The LCD contains a socket for an SD card (which I didn’t use). It is connected to 4 pins on the pcb. I used the pins and a piece of SIL header or IC socket to help support the LCD.
Notice that there are some links under the ZIF socket. Solder them in before you fit it.
I added a programming connector with Tx, Rx, Gnd and a reset button. (My USB-to-serial convertor doesn’t have a DTR pin so I have to reset the Arduino manually.) I unsoldered the programming connector when the project was finished.
To protect the electronics, I made a cover from polystyrene sheet.
Files for the circuit in EasyPC format are attached.