ENEE 206

April 6, 2004



Laboratory 14 - Monostable and astable circuits

A. Lab Goals

B. Background Reading

C. Definitions

D. Laboratory Equipment

E. New Hardware

F. Circuit Analysis

G. Helpful Hints

  1. You need to run the oscilloscope in single-shot mode for the one-shot circuit.

  2. In this lab we will run CMOS chips at voltages well above 5 V. Make certain that you do not run TTL chips at any voltage except 5 V. If a chip gets hot/ smells funny / is smoking(!) it is probabley not connected properly or the voltage is wrong. Turn off the power supply immediately and check that the chips are inserted properly (not upside down, shorted out by the breadboard, etc.) and that the wires are connected properly. Note that connecting the outputs of two different components together is a frequent cause of circuit malfunction. If there are no wiring mistakes, remove the power leads to the circuit and check the power supply voltage.

  3. Try to arrange your components on the breadboard in a similar arrangement as on the wiring diagram.

Laboratory 14 Description - Monostable and astable circuits

Objective:

Available Hardware:

Digital component boxes - see Appendix G, and momentary switches.

Pre-lab preparation:

Unless otherwise stated, asssume for the following circuits that there is a simple resitive load R and and AC source with an amplitude of 5 V(rms).

    Part I - 555 timer clock circuit

  1. ....
  2. ....

    Part II - 555 timer one-shot circuit

  3. ....

    Part III - Gated clock

  4. ....
  5. ....

Experimental Procedure:

During this experiment, be certain that you: