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---
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id: jbf1
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title: Breadboards
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tags: [electronics]
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created: Sunday, June 23, 2024
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---
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# Breadboards
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## Contact pins
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- Beneath the plastic casing, the contact holes are connected to one another
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  making a continuous circuit connection
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## Terminal strips
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The holes in the middle portion. They are connected in groups of five and
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comprise two groups separated by the ditch. The terminal strips are not
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connected accross the ditch thus each of the two strips are electrically
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separate.
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## Related notes
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---
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tags:
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  - electricity
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  - electronics
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---
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# Circuits
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An electrical circuit is a set of electrical components connected in such a way
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that current flows in a loop from a voltage source, through the circuit elements
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and back to the voltage source.
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Below is a basic circuit representing a 9-volt
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[battery](Cells_and_batteries.md#cells-and-batteries)
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with a 10,000$\Omega$
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[resistor](Resistance.md) attached
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accross its terminals. Through the application of
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[Ohm's Law](Ohms_Law.md) we can
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determine that the maximum current will be 0.9 miliamps.
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## Open and short circuits
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A circuit with a break in its loop is called an **open circuit**. When a circuit
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is open, no current flows. We can induce an open circuit through the use of a
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switch component that closes and breaks the circuit when invoked.
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A **short circuit** is a path in a circuit that allows current to flow with
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little or no resistance. This is usually unintentional and results in excessive
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current flowing through the circuit. A short circuit is the opposite to an open
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circuit. With an open circuit there is an infinite resistance between the two
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terminals.
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## Vertical circuit diagrams
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Sometimes circuits can be represented in a vertical manner rather than in an
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actual circuit. This is done to simplify the representation. In this approach
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current is represented as flowing in a straight line from the voltage source
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(represented with a circle) to ground.
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The circuit below is functionally identical to the previous circuit but
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represented vertically:
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---
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tags:
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  - electronics
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---
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# Digital circuits
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Ultimately every process in a computer is the product of a digital
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[circuit](Circuits.md) that is
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working on binary values. In contrast to electrical circuits, digital circuits
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are not represented in an
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[analogue](Analogue_and_digital.md) fashion.
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Analogue circuits work on the basis of real continuous phenomena in the world:
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charges and currents. As a result, the key properties of a circuit - voltage,
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current and resistance - can vary over a wide range of values. This is the
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reason that we require components like batteries and resistors: to control the
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natural flow of current and ensure that it only runs within desired parameters.
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In a standard electrical circuit, voltage, current and resistance can vary over
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a wide range of values however in the binary context we want to deal with
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discrete values (zeros and ones) which can be fed into the various
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[logic gates](Logic_gates.md).
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We therefore need a way to represent 'on' and 'off' as single quantities. We do
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this by stipulating that a given voltage corresponds to 'on' (high) and another
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corresponds to 'off' (low). Of course these are not really discrete values since
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voltage is inherently analogue but we basically binary-encode them. Formally
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'on' has a voltage of 1 and 'off' has a voltage of 0. In reality 'on' tends to
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be within 2-5V depending on the circuit design and anything between 0 - 0.8V is
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considered off.
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The [transistor](Transistors.md) is
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the electrical component that enables us to represent given voltage ranges as
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being 'on' or 'off'.
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