File:Neon bulb relaxation oscillator hysteresis curve 2.svg

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English: The IV curve (characteristic curve) of a neon bulb relaxation oscillator (top) showing the hysteresis loop (abcd) of the oscillation, and the resulting output voltage waveform (bottom). A neon bulb relaxation oscillator consists of a capacitor which is charged from a voltage source V0 through a resistor R2, with a neon bulb across the capacitor which discharges it once it reaches the bulb's breakdown voltage Vb. Ths hysteresis curve (abcd) shows the detailed cycle:
  • a-b: The voltage across the bulb rises slowly from zero as the capacitor charges, through a to b, where it reaches the breakdown voltage Vb of the bulb. The gas in the bulb ionizes and it become conductive.
  • b-c: The charge from the capacitor begins to flow through the bulb, instantly increasing the current to point b in the "abnormal glow" region of the curve. The bulb turns on.
  • c-d: The voltage across the bulb and capacitor drops quickly to the extinguishing voltage Ve at which the voltage is insufficient to continue ionizing the gas.
  • d-a: The current through the bulb drops to a very low level, and the bulb turns off. This allows the current from the resistor R1 to begin charging the capacitor up again from a to b and the cycle repeats.

The circuit generates a sawtooth wave, (bottom) alternating between Ve and Vb. The center blue line is the load line, with a slope equal to the resistance R2. In order for the circuit to oscillate, the load line must intersect the IV curve in it's negative resistance region (red) the segment from b to d, where it is declining to the right:

  • If the resistor has too large a value, shown by line R3 so the load line intersects the curve in section a-b, the resistor current will be so low that the bulb leakage current will bleed the capacitor charge away and the voltage will never reach Vb.
  • If the resistor is too small, so the load line intersects the curve in section c-d, shown by line R1, the current through the resistor will be large enough to keep the bulb turned on, and it won't reach the extinguishing voltage Ve.
Information from C. R. Daugherty, et al, General Electric Glow Lamp Manual, 2nd Ed., General Electric, Cleveland, Ohio, 1966
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Author Chetvorno
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2 April 2014

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current01:50, 11 January 2015Thumbnail for version as of 01:50, 11 January 20151,035 × 1,800 (35 KB)Chetvornosimplified graph eliminated some load lines
21:10, 23 April 2014Thumbnail for version as of 21:10, 23 April 20141,138 × 1,931 (42 KB)ChetvornoChanged shape of curve to be more realistic, added a label
13:02, 22 April 2014Thumbnail for version as of 13:02, 22 April 20141,035 × 1,800 (42 KB)ChetvornoChanged shape of negative resistance region, minor change to label
14:26, 2 April 2014Thumbnail for version as of 14:26, 2 April 20141,000 × 1,777 (39 KB)ChetvornoUser created page with UploadWizard
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