Professional Documents
Culture Documents
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
This is a device to control the speed of fan and coolers automatically. The
device presented here makes the fan run at a full speed for pre determined time. This
speed is decreased to medium after some time and to slow then onwards after a period
of 8 hours, the fan or cooler is switched off. The circuit consist of IC1 (555 Timer IC)
which is used as an astable multi vibrator used to generate clock pulses. These are fed
to decade dividers or counters formed by IC2 and IC3 (IC CD4017B). These ICs act
as divide by 10 and divide by 9 counters respectively. The values of capacitor C1 and
resister R1 and R2 are adjusted so that the final output of IC3 goes high after 8 Hours.
So during summer nights the temperature is quality high but as time passes
temperature starts dropping. So it is required to reduce the speed of a fan or cooler
after particular periods. By using this device these reducing can be done
automatically. This also makes the reduced conception of power.
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CHAPTER 2
EXISTING SYSTEM
In existing system the speed of the fans was changed manually using selector
switch. By changing the position of selector switch the speed of fan increases /
decreases. So the existing system has manually controlled speed regulator. This
system is very difficult for us to vary the speed of the regulator manually during the
sleeping time. So most of the times the speed of the fan will be in the same stage
during night times.
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CHAPTER 3
PROPOSED SYSTEM
The existing system insists physical burden to users. In this proposed system we just
made some changes or alternation to the existing system. In this proposed system, the
manual operation was changed to automatic and thus it makes the user more userfriendly and helpful.
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CHAPTER 4
SYSTEM MODEL
The system consists of an astable timer NE555, Decade counters CD4017B,
Transistor BC 548, Relay and a Fan.
4.1 BLOCK DIAGRAM
Fig.4.1.Block Diagram
4.2 BLOCK DESCRIPTION
4.2.1 Power Supply
A 6 to 9 v DC Power supply is used. It provides constant power supply to
timer and other components respectively.
4.2.2 Astable Multivibrator
It is used as a pulse generator circuit its high and low state are both unstable.
It provides clock pulses for the working of the decade counter1. The output of the
multivibrator toggles with the low and high continuously, infect generating a train of
pulses.
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CHAPTER 5
HARDWARE DESCRIPTION
5.1 CIRCUIT DIAGRAM
The figure below shows the circuit diagram of An Intelligent Speed Governor
for Fan.
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Initially the fan shall get A/C supply directly so it shall be run at high speed.
When the output Q2 becomes high and Q1 becomes low, relay RL1 is turned off and
relay RL2 is turned on. The fan gets A/C through a resistance and its speed drops to
medium. This continues until output Q4 is high. When Q4 goes low and Q5 goes
high, relay RL2 is activated thus the fan run at low speed. Throughout the process, pin
11 of the IC is low, so T4 is cut off, thus keeping T5 in saturation and relay RL4 is on.
At the end of the cycle, when pin 11(Q9) becomes high T4 get saturated and T5 is cut
off. Relay RL4 is switched off, thus switching of the fan or cooler.
Using the given circuit the fan shall run at high speed for a comparatively
lesser time when either of Q0 or Q1 output is high. At medium speed it will run for a
moderate time period when any of three outputs(Q2 to Q4) is high, while at low speed
it will run for a much longer time period when any of the four outputs(Q5 to Q8) is
high.
It is possible to make the fan run at the three speeds for an equal amount of
time by connecting three terminal decoded outputs of IC3 to each of the transistors T1
to T3. One can also get more than three speeds by using an additional relay transistor
and associated components and connecting one or more outputs of IC3 to it.
5.3 DETAILED COMPONENTS DESCRIPTION
5.3.1 Power Supply
The ac voltage, typically 220V rms, is connected to a transformer, which steps
that ac voltage down to the level of the desired dc output. A diode rectifier then
provides a full wave rectified voltage that is initially filtered by a simple capacitor
filter to produce a dc voltage. A regulator circuit removes the ripples and also remains
the same dc value even if the input dc voltage varies, or the load connected to the
output dc voltage changes. This voltage regulation is usually obtained using one of the
popular voltage regulator ic units.
TRANSFORMER
RECTIFIER
FILTER
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IC REGULATOR
LOAD
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One half cycles later the polarity across the secondary of the transformer
reverse, forward biasing D16 and D14 and reverse biasing D15 and D17. Current flow
will now be from point A through D14, up through RL, through D16, through the
secondary of T1, and back to point A. This path is indicated by the broken arrows.
The current flow through RL is always in the same direction. Since current flows
through the load (RL) during both half cycles of the applied voltage, this bridge
rectifier is a full-wave rectifier.
One advantage of a bridge rectifier over a conventional full-wave rectifier is
that with a given transformer the bridge rectifier produces a voltage output that is
nearly twice that of the conventional full-wave circuit.
This may be shown by assigning values to some of the components shown in
fig.6.4 and 6.5. Assume that the same transformer is used in both circuits. The peak
voltage developed between points X and Y is 1000 volts in both circuits. In the
conventional full-wave circuit is shown in Fig. 6.4, the peak voltage from the center
tap to either X and Y is 500 volts. Since only one diode can conduct at any instant, the
maximum voltage that can be rectified at any instant is 500 volts.
The maximum voltage that appears across the load resistor is nearly but never
exceeds 500 volts, as result of the small voltage drop across the diode. In the bridge
rectifier shown in Fig.6.5, the maximum voltage that can be rectified is the full
secondary voltage, which is 1000 volts. Therefore, the peak output voltage across the
load resistor is nearly 1000 volts. With both circuits using the same transformer, the
bridge rectifier circuit.
IC Voltage Regulators
Voltage regulators comprise class of widely used ICs. Regulator IC units
contain the circuitry for reference source, comparator amplifier, control device, and
overload protection all in a single IC. IC units provide regulation of either a fixed
positive voltage, a fixed negative voltage, or an adjustably set voltage. The regulators
can be selected for operation with load currents from hundreds of milli amperes to
tens of amperes, corresponding to power ratings from milli watts to tens of watts.
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a variety of timer, pulse generation and oscillator applications. The 555 can be used to
provide time delays, as an oscillator, and as a flip-flop element. Derivatives provide
up to four timing circuits in one package. the 555 is still in widespread use, thanks to
its ease of use, low price and good stability, and is now made by many companies in
the original bipolar and also in low-power CMOS types.
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and supply pin (pin 8). The load connected between output and ground supply
pin is called the normally on load and that connected between output and
ground pin is called the normally off load.
Pin 4: Reset Terminal: Whenever the timer IC is to be reset or disabled, a
negative pulse is applied to pin 4, and thus is named as reset terminal. The
output is reset irrespective of the input condition. When this pin is not to be
used for reset purpose, it should be connected to + VCC to avoid any possibility
of false triggering.
Pin 5: Control Voltage Terminal: The threshold and trigger levels are
controlled using this pin. The pulse width of the output waveform is
determined by connecting a POT or bringing in an external voltage to this pin.
The external voltage applied to this pin can also be used to modulate the
output waveform. Thus, the amount of voltage applied in this terminal will
decide when the comparator is to be switched, and thus changes the pulse
width of the output. When this pin is not used, it should be bypassed to ground
through a 0.01 micro Farad to avoid any noise problem.
Pin 6: Threshold Terminal: This is the non-inverting input terminal of
comparator 1, which compares the voltage applied to the terminal with a
reference voltage of 2/3 VCC. The amplitude of voltage applied to this terminal
is responsible for the set state of flip-flop. When the voltage applied in this
terminal is greater than 2/3Vcc, the upper comparator switches to +Vsat and
the output gets reset.
Pin 7 : Discharge Terminal: This pin is connected internally to the collector of
transistor and mostly a capacitor is connected between this terminal and
ground. It is called discharge terminal because when transistor saturates,
capacitor discharges through the transistor. When the transistor is cut-off, the
capacitor charges at a rate determined by the external resistor and capacitor.
Pin 8: Supply Terminal: A supply voltage of + 5 V to + 18 V is applied to this
terminal with respect to ground (pin 1).
IC NE555 Features
Turn off less than 2 micro second
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The 555 timer consist of two voltage comparators, a by stable flip flop , a
discharge transistor, and a resister divider network. The resistive divider network is
used to set the comparator levels. Since all 3 registers are of equal value, the threshold
comparator is referenced internally at 2/3 of supply voltage level and trigger
comparator is referenced at 1/3 of supply voltage. The outputs of comparators are tied
to the bi stable flip flop. When the trigger voltage is mode below 1/3 of the supply, the
comparator changes state and sets the flip flop driving the output to the high state. The
threshold pin normally monitors the capacitor voltage of the RC timing network.
When the capacitor voltage exceeds 2/3 of the supply the threshold comparator resets
the flip flop which in turn drives the output to a low state. When the output is in allow
state, the discharged transistor is on there by discharging the external timing capacitor.
Once the capacitor is discharges, the timer will await another trigger pulse, the timing
cycle have been completed.
555 timer integrated timer is used for generating accurate time delays or oscillation.
This will provide time delay ranging from micro seconds to hours. Maximum
operating frequency is in excess of 500KHz. Outputs is TTL compactly. The 555
timer can b used with supply voltage in range +5V to +18V and can drive load up to
200mA
5.3.4 BC548 Transistor
The BC548 is a general purpose NPN bipolar junction transistor. The BC548
is the modern plastic packaged BC108, and can be used in any circuit designed for the
BC108 or BC148, The BC546 and BC547 are essentially the same as the BC548 but
selected with higher breakdown voltages while the BC549 is low noise version, and
the BC550 both high-voltage and low-noise. The BC556 to BC560 are the PNP
counterparts of the BC546 to BC550, respectively.
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5.3.5 Relay
Relay is an electrically operated switch. Current flowing through the coil of
the relay creates a magnetic field which attracts a lever and changes the switch
contacts. The coil current can be on or off so relays have two switch positions and
they are double throw (change over) switches. Relays allow one circuit to switch a
second circuit which can be completely separate from the first one. For example a low
voltage battery circuit can use a relay to switch a 230V AC mains circuit. There is no
electrical connection inside the relay between the two circuits; the link is magnetic
and mechanical.
Fig.5.11. 6V DC Relay
The coil of a relay passes a relatively large current, typically 30mA for a 12V
relay, but it can be as much as 100mA for relays designed to operate from lower
voltages. Most ICs (chips) cannot provide this current and a transistor is usually used
to amplify the small IC current to larger value required for the relay coil.
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Relays are usually SPDT or DPDT but they can have many more sets of
switch contacts, for example relays with 4 sets of change over contacts are readily
available. Most relays are designed for PCB mounting but you can solder wires
directly to the pins providing you take care to avoid melting the plastic case of the
relay.
Fig.5.12.Relay Switch
The picture shows a working relay with its coil and switch contacts. You can
see a lever on the left being attracted by magnetism when the coil is switched on. This
lever moves the switch contacts. There is one set of contacts (SPDT) in the
foreground and another behind them, making the relay DPDT The relays switch
connections are usually labeled COM, NC and NO. COM
is
Common,
always
5.3.6 Fan
Fig.5.13. Fan
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but
use
significantly
less
power
(cooling
air
is thermo
CHAPTER 6
IMPLEMENTATION AND DEBUGGING
6.1 HARDWARE DEVELOPMENT
The system is designed with the help of digital and discrete components. The
components used in the system are Digital ICs, Transistors, Relay circuit, Fan.
6.1.1 PCB Designing
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The simplest method, used for small scale production and often by hobbyists
is immersion etching, in which the board is submerged in etching solution such as
ferric chloride. Compared with methods used for mass production, the etching time is
long. Heat and agitation can be applied to the bath to speed the etching rate. In bubble
etching, air is passed through the etchant bath to agitate the solution and speed up
etching. Splash etching uses a motor driven puddle to splash boards with etchant; the
process has become commercially obsolete since it is not as fast as spray etching. In
spray etching, the etchant solution is distributed over the boards by nozzles, and
recirculated by pumps. Adjustments of the nozzle pattern, flow rate, temperature, and
etchant composition gives predictable control of etching rates and high production
rates.
As more copper is consumed from the boards, the etchant becomes saturated
and less effective, different etchants have different capacities for copper, with some as
high as 150 grams of copper per liter of solution. In commercial use, etchants can be
regenerated to restore their activity, and the dissolved copper recovered and sold.
Small scale etching requires attention to disposal of used etchant, which is corrosive
and toxic due to its metal content.
The etchant removes copper on all surfaces exposed by the resist. Undercut
occurs when etchant attacks the thin edge of copper under the resist; this can reduce
conductor widths and cause open circuits. Careful control of etch time is required to
prevent undercut. Where metallic plating is used as a resist, it can overhang which
can cause short circuits between adjacent traces when closely spaced. Overhang can
be removed by wire brushing the board after etching.
Lamination
Some PCBs have trace layers inside the CB and ate called multi layer PCBs.
These are formed by bonding together separately etched thin boards.
Drilling
Holes through a PCB are typically drilled with small diameter drill bits made
of solid coated tungsten carbide. Coated tungsten carbide is recommended since many
board materials are very abrasive and drilling must be high RPM and high feed to be
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cost effective. Drill bits must also remain sharp so as not to mar or tear the traces.
Drilling with high speed steel is simply not feasible since the drill bits will dull
quickly and thus tear the copper and ruin the boards. The drilling is performed by
automated drilling machines with placement controlled by a drill tape or drill file.
These computer generated files are also called numerically controlled drill (NCD)
files or Excellon files. The drill file describes the location and size of each drilled
holes. These holes are often filled with annular rings (hollow rivets) to create vias.
Vias allow the electrical and thermal connection of conductors on opposite sides of
the PCB.
When very small vias are required, drilling with mechanical bits is costly
because of high rates of wear and breakage. In this case, the vias may be evaporated
by lasers. Laser drilled vias typically have an inferior surface finish inside the hole.
These holes are called micro vias.
It is also possible with controlled depth drilling, laser drilling, or by predrilling the individual sheets of the PCB before lamination, to produce holes that
connect only some of the copper layers, rather than passing through the entire board.
These holes are called blind vias when they connect an internal copper layer to an
outer layer, or buried via when they connect two or more internal copper layers and
no outer layers.
The walls of the holes, for boards with or more layers, are made conductive
then plated with copper to form plated through holes that electrically connect the
conducting layers of the PCB. For multilayer boards, those with layers or more,
drilling typically produces a smear of the high temperature decomposition products of
bonding agent in the laminate system. Before the holes can be plated through, this
smear must be remove by a chemical desmear process, or by plasma etch. Removing
(etching back) the smear also reveals the interior conductors as well.
Solder resist
Areas that should not be soldered may be covered with a polymer solder resist
(solder mask) coating. The solder resist prevents solder from bridging between
conductors and creating short circuits. Solder resists also provide some protection
from the environment. Solder resist is typically 20-30 micrometers thick.
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Screen printing
Line art and text may be printed onto the outer surfaces of a PCB by screen
printing. When space permits, the screen print text can indicate component
designators, switch setting requirements, test points, and other features helpful in
assembling, testing, and servicing the circuit board. Screen print is also known as the
silk screen, or, in one sided PCBs, the red print.
Lately some digital printing solutions have been developed to substitute the
traditional screen printing process. This technology allows printing variable data onto
the PCB, including serialization and barcode information for trace ability purpose.
Test
Unpopulated boards may be subjected to a bare board test where each circuit
connection (as defined in a netlist) is verified as correct on the finished board. For
high volume production, a bed of nails tester, a fixture or a rigid needle adapter is
used to make contact with copper lands or holes on one or both sides of the board to
facilitate testing. A computer will instruct the electrical test unit to apply a small
voltage to each contact point on the bed-of-nails as required, and verify that such
voltage appears at other appropriate contact points. A short on a board would be a
connection where there should not be one; an open is between two points that
should be connected but are not. For small or medium volume boards, flying probe
and flying-grid testers use moving test heads to make contact with the
copper/silver/gold/solder lands or holes to verify the electrical connectivity of the
board under test. Another method for testing is industrial CT scanning, which can
generate a 3D rendering of the board along with 2D image slices and can details such
a soldered paths and connections.
Printed circuit assembly
After the printed circuit board (PCB) is completed, electronic components
must be attached to form a functional printed circuit assembly, or PCA (sometimes
called a printed circuit board assembly PCBA). In through hole construction,
component leads are inserted in holes. In surface mount construction, the components
are placed on pads or lands on the outer surfaces of the PCB. In both kinds of
construction, component leads are electrically and mechanically fixed to the board
with a molten metal solder.
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While the power is on, in circuit test, where physical measurements (i.e.
voltage, frequency) can be done.
While the power is on, functional test, just checking if the PCB does what it
had been designed to do.
To facilitate these tests, PCBs may be designed with extra pads to make
temporary connections. Sometimes these pads must be isolated with resistors. The incircuit test may also exercise boundary scan test features of some components. Incircuit test systems may also be used to program nonvolatile memory components on
the board.
In boundary scan testing, test circuits integrated into various ICs on the board
form temporary connections between the PCB traces to test that the ICs are mounted
correctly. Boundary scan testing requires that all the ICs to be tested use a standard
test configuration procedure, the most common one being the Joint Test Action Group
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(JTAG) standard. The JTAG test architecture provides a means to test interconnects
between integrated circuits on a board without using physical test probes. JTAG tool
vendors provide various types of stimulus and sophisticated algorithms, not only to
detect the failing nets, but also to isolate the faults to specific nets, devices, and pins.
When boards fail the test, technicians may desolder and replace failed
components, a task known as rework.
Protection and packaging
PCBs intended for extreme environments often have a conformal coating,
which is applied by dipping or spraying after the components have been soldered. The
coat prevents corrosion and leakage currents or shorting due to condensation. The
earliest conformal coats were wax; modern conformal coats are usually dips of dilute
solutions of silicon rubber, polyurethane, acrylic, or epoxy. Another technique for
applying a conformal coating is for plastic to be sputtered onto the PCB in a vacuum
chamber. The chief disadvantage of conformal coatings is that servicing of the board
is rendered extremely difficult.
Many assembled PCBs are static sensitive, and therefore must be placed in
antistatic bags during transport. When handling these boards, the user must be
grounded (earthed). Improper handling techniques might transmit an accumulated
static charge through the board, damaging or destroying components. Even bare
boards are sometimes static sensitive. Traces have become so fie that its quite
possible to blow an etch off the board (or change its characteristics) with a static
charge. This is especially true on nontraditional PCBs such as MCMs and microwave
PCBs.
6.1.2 PCB Layout Of The Project
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Solder
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Solder is an alloy (mixture) of tin and lead, typically 60% tin and 40% lead. It
melts at a temperature of about 20o C. Coating a surface with solder is called tinning
because of the tin content of solder. Lead is poisonous and you should always wash
your hands after using solder.
Solder for electronics use contains tiny cores of flux, like the wires inside a
mains flex. The flux is corrosive, like an acid, and it cleans the metal surfaces as the
solder melts. This is why you melt the solder actually on the joint, not on the iron tip.
Without flux most joints would fail because metals quickly oxidize and the solder
itself will flow properly onto a dirty, oxidized, metal surface. The best size of solder
for electronics circuit boards is 22 SWG (SWG Standard Wire Gauge). For plugs,
component holders and other larger joints you may prefer to use 18SWG solder.
Soldering Tools
Soldering Iron
It is the tool used to melt the solder and apply at the joints in the circuits. It
operates in 230V mains supply. The normal power ratings of the soldering iron are
10W, 25W, 35W, 65W and 125W. The iron bit at the top of its gets heated up within a
few minutes. 10W and 25W soldering irons are sufficient for light duty works.
Soldering Station
The soldering station consists of a held hot air blow gun and the base station
comprising of air flow and temperature controls to the hot air blow gun. Tip
temperature is maintained by a feedback control loops. Soldering guns usually have a
trigger switch which controls the AC power.
Preparing the Soldering Iron
Place the soldering iron in its stand and plug in. The iron will take a few
minutes to reach its operating temperature of about 4000C. Dampen the sponge in the
stand. The best way to do this is to lift it out the stand and hold it under a cold tap for
a moment, then squeeze to remove excess water. It should be damp, not dripping wet.
Wait a few minutes for the soldering iron to warm up. Check if it is ready by trying to
melt a little solder on the tip. Wipe the tip of the iron on the damp sponge. This will
clean the tip. Melt a little solder on the tip of the iron. This is called tinning and it
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will help the heat to flow from the irons tip to the joint. It only needs to be done when
you plug in the iron, and occasionally while soldering if you need to wipe the dip
clean on the sponge.
Making Soldered Joints
Hold the soldering iron like a pen, near the base of the handle. Remember to
never touch the hot element or tip. Touch the soldering iron onto the joint to be made.
Make sure it touches both the component lead and the track. It should flow smoothly
onto the lead and track to form a volcano shape. Make sure you apply the solder to the
joint, not the iron. Remove the solder, then the iron, while keeping the joint still.
Allow the joint a few seconds to cool before you move the circuit board. Inspect the
joint closely. It should look shiny and have a volcano shape. If not, you will need to
reheat it and feed in a little more solder. This time ensure that both the lead and track
are reheated fully before applying solder.
Desoldering Using Desoldering Pump
It is the removal of the solder from a previously soldered joint. There are two
ways to remove the solder. Desolder pump is a commonly used device for this
purpose. When the solder melts by the action of the soldering iron, a trigger on the
de-solder pump should be activated to create a vacuum. Repeat if necessary to remove
as much solder as possible. The pump will need emptying occasionally by unscrewing
the nozzle.
Desoldering Using Solder Remover Wick
Apply both the end of the wick and the tip of your soldering iron to the joint.
As the solder melts most of it will flow onto the wick, away from the joint. Remove
the wick first, then the soldering iron. Cut off and discard the end of the wick coated
with solder.
After removing most of the solder from the joint(s) you may be able to remove
the wire or component lead straight away (allow a few seconds for it to cool). If the
joint will not come apart easily apply your soldering iron to melt the remaining traces.
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Design
for
Windows is
commercially
number
of
extensions
and
improvements.
The University
of
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diagram IC1 (555 timer IC) act as an astable multivibrator. It is used to generate clock
pulses. The pulses are fed to a decade divider counter, which is formed by IC2 and
IC3. These ICs act as divide by 10 counters and divide by 9 counter respectively. The
values of capacitors C1, resister R2 and R2 are so adjusted that the final output of IC3
goes high about 8hours.
The first two outputs of IC3 (Q0 and Q1) are connected (0 Red) via diode D1
and D2 to the base of the transistor T1. Initially output Q0 is high and there for relay
RL1 is energized. It remains energized when Q1 becomes high. The method of
connecting the gadget of the fan or cooler is given in the figure.
Initially the fan shall get A/C supply directly so it shall be run at high speed.
When the output Q2 becomes high and Q1 becomes low, relay RL1 is turned off and
relay RL2 is turned on. The fan gets A/C through a resistance and its speed drops to
medium. This continues until output Q4 is high. When Q4 goes low and Q5 goes
high, relay RL2 is activated thus the fan run at low speed.
Throughout the process, pin 11 of the IC is low, so T4 is cut off, thus keeping
T5 in saturation and relay RL4 is on. At the end of the cycle, when pin 11(Q9)
becomes high T4 get saturated and T5 is cut off. Relay RL4 is switched off, thus
switching of the fan or cooler.
Using the given circuit the fan shall run at high speed for a comparatively
lesser time when either of Q0 or Q1 output is high. At medium speed it will run for a
moderate time period when any of three outputs(Q2 to Q4) is high, while at low speed
it will run for a much longer time period when any of the four outputs(Q5 to Q8) is
high.
It is possible to make the fan run at the three speeds for an equal amount of
time by connecting three terminal decoded outputs of IC3 to each of the transistors T1
to T3. One can also get more than three speeds by using an additional relay transistor
and associated components and connecting one or more outputs of IC3 to it.
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CHAPTER 7
CONCLUSION AND FUTURE ENCHANCEMENT
An Intelligent Speed Governor for fan is successfully implemented and
demonstrated. The automatic speed controller for fans or coolers is used to control the
speed automatically. We can also assign different time periods for each speed by
designing the circuit to the need. By using this circuit the electric power can be saved
to a greater extent and increase lifespan of fans and coolers. In future we can interface
with microcontroller and can be modified to temperature controlled.
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REFERENCES
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
http://www.electronicschematics.com
[6]
[7]
http://www.diodes.com/datasheets/ds 1 n 4001.pdf
[8]
http://www.fairchildsemi.com/bs/NE/NE555.pdf
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APPENDIX
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