Working Principle of Rectifier

Hi friends, in this article, I am going to describe the working principle of rectifier, if you are interested, keep reading.

Electric energy is available in homes and industries in the form of alternating voltage. But for the operation of most of the devices in electronic equipment, a DC voltage is required. Therefore almost all electronic equipment consists a circuit that converts AC voltage of mains supply into DC voltage. This part of the equipment is known as the power supply.
 
The process of obtaining unidirectional currents and voltages from alternating currents and voltages is known as rectification. This function is performed by a circuit called rectifier circuit. The unidirectional conducting property of a diode finds great application in rectifier circuits.

Working Principle of Rectifier

Half Wave Rectifier Working Principle

half wave rectifier working principle

In this circuit, rectification is obtained by using a single diode, D, as shown in Fig.
A transformer is used to change the voltage level of the mains supply. It also provides isolation from the power line and reduces the risk of electrical shock.
 
When the circuit is connected to the power mains, an AC voltage is induced across the secondary of the transformer. It has alternate positive and negative half-cycles.
 
During the positive half-cycle of the voltage, A is positive with respect to B

  • diode is switched on (due to forward bias)
  • current i flows.

During the negative half-cycle of the voltage, A is negative with respect to B

  • diode D is switched off (due to reverse bias)
  • no current flows through the load resistor RL.

Thus, an alternating, sinusoidal waveform applied to the transformer primary is rectified into a unidirectional waveform. Obviously, the negative input half-cycle is suppressed i.e. it is not utilized for delivering power to the load.
 
As seen, the output is not a steady dc but only a pulsating dc wave having a ripple frequency equal to that of the input voltage frequency.
 
This wave can be observed by an oscilloscope connected across RL. When measured by a dc voltmeter, it will show some average positive value for voltage (approximately half of the input voltage). Since only one half-cycle of the input wave is used, it is called a half wave rectifier.

Working Principle of Full Wave Rectifier

working principle of full wave rectifier
working principle of rectifier

Four diodes are used in a full bridge rectifier circuit, as shown in Fig. to obtain the output. The input is applied to two opposite corners and the output is taken from the remaining two corners of this circuit.
 
During the positive input half-cycle, terminal A of the secondary is positive and C is negative as shown in Fig. To make the concept understandable, reverse-biased (OFF) diodes are omitted in Fig.

  • diodes D2 and D4 become forward-biased (ON)
  • whereas D1 and D3 are reverse-biased (OFF)
  • current flows along ABEDC producing a drop across RL.

During the negative input half-cycle, secondary terminal C becomes positive and A negative.

  • diodes D2 and D4 are reverse-biased (OFF)
  • D1 and D3 are forward-biased (ON)
  • circuit current flows along CBEDA.
working principle of half wave and full wave rectifier
full bridge rectifier image

Hence, the current keeps flowing through load resistance RL in the same direction BE during both half-cycles of the ac input supply.Point B of the full bridge rectifier acts as an anode and point D as a cathode. The output voltage across RL is equal to the input voltage. Its frequency is twice that of the supply frequency.

The pulsating outputs obtained from the half and full wave rectifier circuits are not suitable for the operation of electronic devices. To obtain a steady DC voltage, we have to filter or smooth out the AC variation from the rectified voltage.
 
For this purpose generally, a capacitor, C, is connected across the output of the rectifier. This capacitor improves wave forms of the rectifier.
 
When the rectifier output voltage is increasing, the capacitor charges to peak voltage Vm and when rectifier output voltage is decreasing capacitor starts to discharge through the load. This process continues. In this way, it smooths out the pulsations of a rectifier.

Ripple Factor and Rectification Efficiency of Rectifier

How effectively a rectifier converts AC power into DC power is described by ripple factor and rectification efficiency.
 
The ripple factor (r) is a measure of the purity of the DC output of a rectifier.
 
r = RMS value of component of wave / average or DC value
 
It is 1.21 for half wave rectifier and 0.482 for full bridge rectifier.
 
The rectification efficiency (ȵ) tells us what percentage of total input AC power is converted into useful DC output power.
 
ȵ = DC power delivered to load / AC input power to the rectifier
 
It is 40.6 % for half wave rectifier and 81.2% for full bridge rectifier.
 
Thanks for reading about working principle of rectifier and working principle of full wave rectifier.
 

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