A blocking oscillator (sometimes called a pulse oscillator) is a simple configuration of discrete electronic components which can produce a
free-running signal, requiring only a
resistor
A resistor is a passive two-terminal electrical component that implements electrical resistance as a circuit element. In electronic circuits, resistors are used to reduce current flow, adjust signal levels, to divide voltages, bias activ ...
, a
transformer
A transformer is a passive component that transfers electrical energy from one electrical circuit to another circuit, or multiple circuits. A varying current in any coil of the transformer produces a varying magnetic flux in the transformer' ...
, and one amplifying element such as a
transistor
upright=1.4, gate (G), body (B), source (S) and drain (D) terminals. The gate is separated from the body by an insulating layer (pink).
A transistor is a semiconductor device used to Electronic amplifier, amplify or electronic switch, switch ...
or
vacuum tube
A vacuum tube, electron tube, valve (British usage), or tube (North America), is a device that controls electric current flow in a high vacuum between electrodes to which an electric voltage, potential difference has been applied.
The type kn ...
. The name is derived from the fact that the amplifying element is cut-off or "blocked" for most of the
duty cycle, producing periodic pulses on the principle of a
relaxation oscillator. The non-sinusoidal output is not suitable for use as a radio-frequency local oscillator, but it can serve as a timing generator, to power lights,
LEDs,
Elwire
Electroluminescent wire (often abbreviated as EL wire) is a thin copper wire coated in a phosphor that produces light through electroluminescence when an alternating current is applied to it. It can be used in a wide variety of applications— ...
, or small neon indicators. If the output is used as an
audio signal
An audio signal is a representation of sound, typically using either a changing level of electrical voltage for analog signals, or a series of binary numbers for digital signals. Audio signals have frequencies in the audio frequency range of ro ...
, the simple tones are also sufficient for applications such as alarms or a
Morse code
Morse code is a method used in telecommunication to encode text characters as standardized sequences of two different signal durations, called ''dots'' and ''dashes'', or ''dits'' and ''dahs''. Morse code is named after Samuel Morse, one ...
practice device. Some cameras use a blocking oscillator to strobe the flash prior to a shot to reduce the
red-eye effect.
Due to the circuit's simplicity, it forms the basis for many of the learning projects in commercial electronic kits. The secondary winding of the transformer can be fed to a speaker, a lamp, or the windings of a relay. Instead of a resistor, a
potentiometer
A potentiometer is a three- terminal resistor with a sliding or rotating contact that forms an adjustable voltage divider. If only two terminals are used, one end and the wiper, it acts as a variable resistor or rheostat.
The measuring instrum ...
placed in parallel with the timing capacitor permits the frequency to be adjusted freely, but at low resistances the transistor can be overdriven, and possibly damaged. The output signal will jump in amplitude and be greatly distorted.
Circuit operation
The circuit works due to positive feedback through the transformer and involves two times—the time T
closed when the switch is closed, and the time T
open when the switch is open. The following abbreviations are used in the analysis:
* t, time, a variable
* T
closed: instant at the end of the closed cycle, beginning of open cycle. Also a measure of the time ''duration'' when the switch is closed.
* T
open: instant at the end of the open cycle, beginning of closed cycle. Same as T=0. Also a measure of the time ''duration'' when the switch is open.
* V
b, source voltage e.g. V
battery
* V
p, voltage ''across'' the primary winding. An ideal switch will present supply voltage V
b across the primary, so in the ideal case V
p = V
b.
* V
s, voltage ''across'' the secondary winding
* V
z, fixed load voltage caused by e.g. by the reverse voltage of a
Zener diode or the forward voltage of a
light-emitting diode
A light-emitting diode (LED) is a semiconductor device that emits light when current flows through it. Electrons in the semiconductor recombine with electron holes, releasing energy in the form of photons. The color of the light ( ...
(LED).
* I
m, magnetizing current in the primary
* I
peak,m, maximum or "peak" magnetizing current in the primary. Occurs immediately before T
open.
* N
p, number of primary turns
* N
s, number of secondary turns
* N, the turns ratio defined as N
s/N
p, . For an ideal transformer operating under ideal conditions, I
s = I
p/N, V
s = N×V
p.
* L
p, primary (self-)inductance, a value determined by the number of primary turns N
p ''squared'', and an "inductance factor" A
L. Self-inductance is often written as L
p = A
L×N
p2×10
−9 henries.
* R, combined switch and primary resistance
* U
p, energy stored in the flux of the magnetic field in the windings, as represented by the magnetizing current I
m.
A more-detailed analysis would require the following:
* M = mutual inductance, its value determined by degree to which the magnetic field created by the primary couples to (is shared by) the secondary, and vice versa. coupling. Coupling is never perfect; there is always so-called primary and secondary "leakage flux". Usually calculated from short-circuit secondary and short-circuited primary measurements.
** L
p,leak = self-inductance that represents the magnetic field created by, and coupled to the primary windings only
** L
s,leak = self-inductance that represents the magnetic field created by, and coupled to the secondary windings only
* C
windings = interwinding capacitance. Values exist for the primary turns only, the secondary turns only, and the primary-to-secondary windings. Usually combined into a single value.
Operation during Tclosed (time when the switch is closed)
When the switch (transistor, vacuum tube) closes it places the source voltage V
b across the transformer primary. The magnetizing current I
m of the transformer is I
m = V
primary×t/L
p; here t (time) is a variable that starts at 0. This magnetizing current I
m will "ride upon" any reflected secondary current I
s that flows into a secondary load (e.g. into the control terminal of the switch; reflected secondary current in primary = I
s/N). The ''changing'' primary current causes a ''changing'' magnetic field ("flux") through the transformer's windings; this ''changing'' field induces a (relatively) ''steady'' secondary voltage V
s = N×V
b. In some designs (as shown in the diagrams) the secondary voltage V
s adds to the source voltage V
b; in this case because the voltage across the primary (during the time the switch is closed) is approximately V
b, V
s = (N+1)×V
b. Alternately the switch may get some of its control voltage or current directly from V
b and the rest from the induced V
s. Thus the switch-control voltage or current is "in phase" meaning that it keeps the switch closed, and it (via the switch) maintains the source voltage across the primary.
In the case when there is little or no primary resistance and little or no switch resistance, the increase of the magnetizing current I
m is a "linear ramp" defined by the formula in the first paragraph. In the case when there is significant primary resistance or switch resistance or both (total resistance R, e.g. primary-coil resistance plus a resistor in the emitter, FET channel resistance), the L
p/R time constant causes the magnetizing current to be a rising ''curve'' with continually decreasing slope. In either case the magnetizing current I
m will come to dominate the total primary (and switch) current I
p. Without a limiter it would increase forever. However, in the first case (low resistance), the switch will eventually be unable to "support" more current meaning that its effective resistance increases so much that the voltage drop across the switch equals the supply voltage; in this condition the switch is said to be "saturated" (e.g. this is determined by a transistor's gain h
fe or "beta"). In the second case (e.g. primary and/or emitter resistance dominant) the (decreasing) slope of the current decreases to a point such that the induced voltage into the secondary is no longer adequate to keep the switch closed. In a third case, the magnetic "core" material saturates, meaning it cannot support further ''increases'' in its magnetic field; in this condition induction from primary to secondary fails. In all cases, the ''rate of rise'' of the primary magnetizing current (and hence the flux), or the rate-of-rise of the flux directly in the case of saturated core material, drops to zero (or close to zero). In the first two cases, although primary current continues to flow, it approaches a steady value equal to the supply voltage V
b divided by the total resistance R in the primary circuit. In this current-limited condition the transformer's flux will be steady. Only ''changing'' flux causes induction of voltage into the secondary, so a steady flux represents a failure of induction. The secondary voltage drops to zero. The switch opens.
Operation during Topen (time when the switch is open)
Now that the switch has opened at T
open, the magnetizing current in the primary is I
peak,m = V
p×T
closed/L
p, and the energy U
p is stored in this "magnetizing" field as created by I
peak,m (energy U
m = 1/2×L
p×I
peak,m2). But now there is no primary voltage (V
b) to sustain further increases in the magnetic field, or even a steady-state field, the switch being opened and thereby removing the primary voltage. The magnetic field (flux) begins to collapse, and the collapse forces energy back into the circuit by inducing current and voltage into the primary turns, the secondary turns, or both. Induction into the primary will be via the primary turns through which all the flux passes (represented by primary inductance L
p); the collapsing flux creates primary voltage that forces current to continue to flow either out of the primary toward the (now-open) switch or into a primary load such as an LED or a Zener diode, etc. Induction into the secondary will be via the secondary turns through which the ''mutual'' (linked) flux passes; this induction causes voltage to appear at the secondary, and if this voltage is not blocked (e.g. by a diode or by the very high impedance of a FET gate), secondary current will flow into the secondary circuit (but in the opposite direction). In any case, if there are no components to absorb the current, the voltage at the switch rises very fast. Without a primary load or in the case of very limited secondary current the voltage will be limited only by the distributed capacitances of the windings (the so-called interwinding capacitance), and it can destroy the switch. When only interwinding capacitance and a tiny secondary load is present to absorb the energy, very high-frequency oscillations occur, and these "parasitic oscillations" represent a possible source of
electromagnetic interference
Electromagnetic interference (EMI), also called radio-frequency interference (RFI) when in the radio frequency spectrum, is a disturbance generated by an external source that affects an electrical circuit by electromagnetic induction, electrost ...
.
The potential of the secondary voltage now flips to negative in the following manner. The collapsing flux induces primary current to flow ''out'' of the primary toward the now-open switch i.e. to flow in the same direction it was flowing when the switch was closed. For current to flow ''out'' of the switch-end of the primary, the primary voltage at the switch end must be ''positive'' relative to its other end that is at the supply voltage V
b. But this represents a primary voltage ''opposite'' in polarity to what it was during the time when the switch was closed: during T
closed, the switch-end of the primary was approximately zero and therefore negative relative to the supply end; now during T
open it has become positive relative to V
b.
Because of the transformer's "winding sense" (direction of its windings), the voltage that appears at the secondary must now be ''negative''. A negative control voltage will maintain the switch (e.g. NPN bipolar transistor or N-channel FET) ''open'', and this situation will persist until the energy of the collapsing flux has been absorbed (by something). When the absorber is in the primary circuit, e.g. a Zener diode (or LED) with voltage V
z connected "backwards" across the primary windings, the current waveshape is a triangle with the time t
open determined by the formula I
p = I
peak,m - V
z×T
open/L
p, here I
peak,m being the primary current at the time the switch opens. When the absorber is a capacitor the voltage and current waveshapes are a 1/2 cycle sinewave, and if the absorber is a capacitor plus resistor the waveshapes are a 1/2 cycle damped sinewave.
When at last the energy discharge is complete, the control circuit becomes "unblocked". Control voltage (or current) to the switch is now free to "flow" into the control input and close the switch. This is easier to see when a capacitor "commutates" the control voltage or current; the ringing oscillation carries the control voltage or current from negative (switch open) through 0 to positive (switch closed).
Repetition rate 1/(Tclosed + Topen)
In the simplest case, the duration of the total cycle (T
closed + T
open), and hence its repetition rate (the reciprocal of the cycle duration), is almost wholly dependent on the transformer's magnetizing inductance L
p, the supply voltage, and the load voltage V
z. When a capacitor and resistor are used to absorb the energy, the repetition rate is dependent on the
R-C time-constant, or the L-C time constant when R is small or non-existent (L can be L
p, L
s or L
p,s).
Patents
* US
Patent
A patent is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the legal right to exclude others from making, using, or selling an invention for a limited period of time in exchange for publishing an sufficiency of disclosure, enabling disclo ...
2211852, filed in 1937, "''Blocking oscillator apparatus''". (based around a
vacuum tube
A vacuum tube, electron tube, valve (British usage), or tube (North America), is a device that controls electric current flow in a high vacuum between electrodes to which an electric voltage, potential difference has been applied.
The type kn ...
).
* US Patent 2745012, filed in 1951, "''Transistor blocking oscillators''".
* US Patent 2780767, filed in 1955, "''Circuit arrangement for converting a low voltage into a high direct voltage''".
* US Patent 2881380,
U.S. Patent 2881380.
"Voltage converter", filed 15 Oct 1956, retrieved 16 Aug 2016 filed in 1956, "''Voltage converter''".
See also
* Flyback converter
* Forward converter
* Joule thief
Footnotes
References
*
* In particular §7-13 The monostable blocking oscillator" p. 203ff and §7-14 The astable blocking oscillator p. 206ff.
* For a tuned version of the blocking oscillator, i.e. a circuit that will make pretty sinewaves if properly designed, see 17-17 "Resonant-Circuit Oscillators" pp. 530–2.
*
External links
* An elementary (no mathematics) and informative description of various blocking oscillator circuits, employing BJTs and Triode
A triode is an electronic amplifying vacuum tube (or ''valve'' in British English) consisting of three electrodes inside an evacuated glass envelope: a heated filament or cathode, a grid, and a plate (anode). Developed from Lee De Forest's 1 ...
s.
* A paper deriving some circuit models in order to predict the switching performance of BJT blocking oscillators.
{{Electronic oscillators
Electronic oscillators