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  2. Electronic mixer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_mixer

    Diode mixers take advantage of the non-linearity of diode devices to produce the desired multiplication in the squared term. They are very inefficient as most of the power output is in other unwanted terms which need filtering out. Inexpensive AM radios still use diode mixers. Electronic mixers are usually made with transistors and/or diodes ...

  3. Diode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diode

    A common variant of a diode is a light-emitting diode, ... A p–n junction diode is made of a crystal ... The 1N21 series and others are used in mixer and detector ...

  4. Electronic component - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_component

    Various examples of Light-emitting diodes. Laser diode; Light-emitting diode (LED) – a diode that emits light; Photodiode – passes current in proportion to incident light Avalanche photodiode – photodiode with internal gain; Solar Cell, photovoltaic cell, PV array or panel – produces power from light; DIAC (diode for alternating current ...

  5. Frequency mixer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_mixer

    Frequency mixer symbol. In electronics, a mixer, or frequency mixer, is an electrical circuit that creates new frequencies from two signals applied to it.In its most common application, two signals are applied to a mixer, and it produces new signals at the sum and difference of the original frequencies.

  6. Light-emitting diode physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-emitting_diode_physics

    Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) produce light (or infrared radiation) by the recombination of electrons and electron holes in a semiconductor, a process called "electroluminescence". The wavelength of the light produced depends on the energy band gap of the semiconductors used.

  7. Light-emitting diode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-emitting_diode

    In an organic light-emitting diode , the electroluminescent material composing the emissive layer of the diode is an organic compound. The organic material is electrically conductive due to the delocalization of pi electrons caused by conjugation over all or part of the molecule, and the material therefore functions as an organic semiconductor ...

  8. History of the LED - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_LED

    The first Light-Emitting Diode was created in 1927 by Russian inventor Oleg Losev, [1] and used silicon carbide as a semiconductor. However, electroluminescence as a phenomenon was discovered twenty years earlier by the English experimenter Henry Joseph Round of Marconi Labs , using the same crystal and a cat's-whisker detector .

  9. LED lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LED_lamp

    A 230-volt LED filament lamp, with an E27 base. The filaments are visible as the eight yellow vertical lines. An assortment of LED lamps commercially available in 2010: floodlight fixtures (left), reading light (center), household lamps (center right and bottom), and low-power accent light (right) applications An 80W Chips on board (COB) LED module from an industrial light luminaire, thermally ...