What is a Zener Diode? How Does it Work? Where to Use? ( Zener Diode Tutorial)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024

Комментарии • 60

  • @Eduardo_Espinoza
    @Eduardo_Espinoza Год назад +6

    Didn't understand it all, but at least I learned something. :)

  • @ralphacosta4726
    @ralphacosta4726 2 года назад +3

    Thank you! Very clearly explained, with excellent examples of usage.

  • @claude77573
    @claude77573 Месяц назад

    Thank you for your efforts making this video. If I'm not mistaken, and as I understand the explanations later in the video, at 0:33 seconds, the Cathode of the zener should be connected to the positive voltage potential. I believe this makes use of the specific reververse brakedown characteristic of zeners.

  • @Fraiyia
    @Fraiyia Год назад +1

    Very good video I need to explain a Zeaner diode to somebody and I may use this video the number one thing they need to know how to do was make a clipping circuit . Thanks.

  • @kabandajamir9844
    @kabandajamir9844 2 года назад +2

    The world's best teacher thanks

    • @eeapplications
      @eeapplications  2 года назад +1

      You're welcome! I'm glad you think so 😊🙏

  • @LoganDunbar
    @LoganDunbar 2 года назад +5

    This was great, thanks! Quick question, voltage regulators are often quite inefficient, and can get quite hot, do Zener Diodes suffer the same issues?

    • @eeapplications
      @eeapplications  2 года назад +2

      Thank you. This type of problem is less common in the Zener diode.

    • @deang5622
      @deang5622 Год назад +13

      Voltage regulators and zeners are not the same thing.
      With a voltage regulator you might pass 1 amp through it, you don't do that with a zener.
      You don't draw your load current through the zener.
      You pass enough current through the zener (typically milliamps) to cause the diode to break down at the required breakdown voltage. The datasheet will tell you what the minimum amount of current is.
      The zener is a voltage reference *NOT* a voltage regulator.

    • @epiendless1128
      @epiendless1128 Год назад

      OK, say you have a 10V supply, 5 ohm series resistors and a 5V Zener. That can supply 5V 1Amp to the load. If you take an amp, the resistor gets as hot as a voltage regulator but all the current is going into the load so the Zener isn't hot.
      BUT, if you remove the load, that amp now flows through the Zener. The resistor is still hot, and now so is the Zener! Far worse than a voltage regulator.
      Which is why you would design the Zener circuit to only supply say 10mA, and then use that to drive a transistor to boost the current (I'm simplifying). And that's a linear voltage regulator.

    • @user-os3hz6wr2y
      @user-os3hz6wr2y 5 месяцев назад

      Voltage regulators are a better option in high power circuits. Zeners have poor regulation and the output current range is limited. Voltage regulators often need heatsinks.

  • @billyclayton1154
    @billyclayton1154 5 месяцев назад +2

    , . Big difference! Thanks

  • @marian20012
    @marian20012 7 месяцев назад +3

    I was messing with zener diodes yesterday and they don't work the way presented in books nor here...if you change input voltage, the zener diode voltage changes also, but not so much. for example, you change input from 5 to 20 volts. the zener diode voltage changes from 3 to 4 volts.

    • @user-os3hz6wr2y
      @user-os3hz6wr2y 5 месяцев назад

      Zener diodes are not perfect, as presented here. They have a slope and the voltage does change with input and load.

  • @abdullahutd9944
    @abdullahutd9944 2 года назад +2

    Very helpful thank you

  • @miroslavstevic2036
    @miroslavstevic2036 3 месяца назад +1

    Zeners can't replace even simplest voltage regulators. Their breakdown voltage is unpredictable, they are drifting with temperature, their current is typically low.

  • @mixme8655
    @mixme8655 2 года назад +1

    Thank you sir very helpful

    • @eeapplications
      @eeapplications  2 года назад +1

      I'm glad the videos were helpful. Thank you 😊

  • @Savan_Triveda
    @Savan_Triveda Год назад +3

    Very interesting.

  • @dannyh8288
    @dannyh8288 Год назад +4

    Clear as mud.

  • @thomasgrafe8767
    @thomasgrafe8767 Год назад +1

    Thanks for CC translate in Germany

  • @davidfalconer8913
    @davidfalconer8913 8 месяцев назад

    You may also use an LED as a Zener diode ! a red LED will regulate at about 2 Volts and a blue or white LED will be slightly higher at 3 Volts ... The EHT diode in a microwave oven has many high voltage diodes in its package and might regulate at around 10 Volts ( which is why you cannot test it with a multimeter set to diode test ! ) for MUCH higher voltages a Neon bulb can be used ( 90 Volts ? ) ..... DAVE™🛑

  • @Hadii127
    @Hadii127 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks 👍

  • @squatter3425
    @squatter3425 Год назад +1

    Can a Zener diode be used to limit the output of a 650 watt portable gas generator to say 230 volts? Its governor keeping the revs constant to produce 230 volts is inoperative.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 11 месяцев назад

      Actually, the Zener effect is a low voltage thing found in diodes with high doping levels; generally below 10V. Above that voltage the avalanche effect takes over.
      Anyway, no. You need a series regulator to regulate that way, and doing that with a high power device is spectacularly expensive.
      The governor should be economical enough to repair.

  • @frequencywatchers
    @frequencywatchers Год назад +1

    Its Super Good For radio Signal Detection

    • @eeapplications
      @eeapplications  Год назад

      👍

    • @deang5622
      @deang5622 Год назад

      Is it? Better than a signal detection diode?
      Does the fact it is a zener which is designed to breakdown at a specified reverse bias voltage, is that a desirable or essential property to have in signal detection/demodulation?

  • @RixtronixLAB
    @RixtronixLAB Год назад +1

    Nice video, thanks :)

  • @mehranbarahouei2346
    @mehranbarahouei2346 11 месяцев назад +1

    very useful

  • @brandonfarfan1978
    @brandonfarfan1978 Год назад +1

    Thanks!👍😄

  • @tamarabarnett9869
    @tamarabarnett9869 Год назад

    Loved it. Thanks.

  • @alrio8102
    @alrio8102 5 месяцев назад

    Series creates more voltage? How?

  • @sugunankaimaparambil7386
    @sugunankaimaparambil7386 Год назад +1

    Explanation is excellent. But the writing covers the figures. So, difficult to see the figures properly.

  • @goranekstrom708
    @goranekstrom708 Год назад +4

    Never connect diodes in parallel without balancing resistors.

    • @epiendless1128
      @epiendless1128 Год назад +1

      Agreed.
      I would not consider the parallel configuration a 1W Zener. It's a 0.5W Zener that keeps working if one Zener fails. Which is how they are used in safety applications.

    • @user-os3hz6wr2y
      @user-os3hz6wr2y 5 месяцев назад

      Don't use zeners in parallel. I have never seen a circuit that does this. The devices would need to be perfectly matched. Use a bigger zener, they are cheap enough.

  • @TheFandiahmad
    @TheFandiahmad Год назад +1

    Can we put the resistor in the catode of zener ?

    • @eeapplications
      @eeapplications  Год назад +1

      In series-connected circuits, their location does not matter. It can be that way.

    • @TheFandiahmad
      @TheFandiahmad Год назад

      @@eeapplications thanks for sharing, great video sir, salam 🙏🙏🙏

  • @VashStarwind
    @VashStarwind Год назад +1

    So basically they only allow a certain amount of current to go through them? Depending on the value of the zener diode?

    • @user-os3hz6wr2y
      @user-os3hz6wr2y 5 месяцев назад

      No, the series resistor determines the current. Without the resistor the diode would self destruct. This video is very simplistic.

    • @Lyndalewinder
      @Lyndalewinder 5 месяцев назад

      Nope. They only allow a certain votage to exist across them (within limits) so can be used as a voltage clamp or reference.

  • @kvanta2
    @kvanta2 Год назад

    he doesn't say that if he puts a larger voltage U across the resistor and the voltage on the zener diode rises, the zener diode short-circuits _maybe 10V on ZD 5V _ZD lets go and it is K.O. _But Voltage regulator is good and working

  • @bartoszbaranowski604
    @bartoszbaranowski604 11 месяцев назад

    How is wattage calculated? Granted it has been a long time since I did any of this stuff. But nothing is ideal and K-laws are here to stay. So some current has to flow and non ideal R of those diodes has to work somehowe with rest of circuit.

  • @humbleexplorer4998
    @humbleexplorer4998 Год назад

    So it's a cheaper version or economical way to use than a voltage regulator? That's what I learned from your video. And the voltage regulator that you showed is a mosfet which can also control the output of the desired current. Isn't that a pros and cons to it?🤔

    • @user-os3hz6wr2y
      @user-os3hz6wr2y 5 месяцев назад

      No. The voltage regulation is not as good as a regulator chip. There is no thermal regulation and the voltage changes with load and input voltage. The current draw must be known to calculate the series restor because the zener has an operating range. A decent regulator has a vastly improved range over a zener.

  • @rajendranlaxmanan2344
    @rajendranlaxmanan2344 Год назад +1

    Your explanation is fine, but your diagram is not vissible due to the explanation lable!

  • @andrewmunz1639
    @andrewmunz1639 Год назад

    Zener-zeener?

  • @Dhru987
    @Dhru987 Год назад +2

    Difficult to understand,