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  2. Clamper (electronics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clamper_(electronics)

    A negative unbiased clamp is the opposite of the equivalent positive clamp. In the positive cycle of the input AC signal, the diode is forward biased and conducts, charging the capacitor to the peak positive value of V IN. During the negative cycle, the diode is reverse biased and thus does not conduct.

  3. English: What it does is use diode clamps to eliminate over and undershoot. The "trick" is that instead of clamping to +5 and GND they clamp to the output of two regulated voltages. This allows the clamping diodes to turn on earlier and is therefore better at eliminating overshoot and undershoot.

  4. Overshoot (signal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overshoot_(signal)

    For a step input, the percentage overshoot (PO) is the maximum value minus the step value divided by the step value. In the case of the unit step, the overshoot is just the maximum value of the step response minus one. Also see the definition of overshoot in an electronics context.

  5. Transient-voltage-suppression diode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transient-voltage...

    A transient-voltage-suppression diode can respond to over-voltages faster than other common over-voltage protection components such as varistors or gas discharge tubes. The actual clamping occurs in roughly one picosecond, but in a practical circuit the inductance of the wires leading to the device imposes a higher limit. This makes transient ...

  6. Step response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_response

    This closed-loop gain is of the same form as the open-loop gain: a one-pole filter. Its step response is of the same form: an exponential decay toward the new equilibrium value. But the time constant of the closed-loop step function is τ / (1 + β A 0), so it is faster than the forward amplifier's response by a factor of 1 + β A 0:

  7. Diode logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diode_logic

    There is also a recovery concern: a diode's current will not decrease immediately when switching from forward-biased to reverse-biased, because discharging its stored charge takes a finite amount of time (t rr or reverse recovery time). [1] In a diode OR gate, if two or more of the inputs are high and one switches to low, recovery issues will ...

  8. Step recovery diode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_recovery_diode

    In electronics, a step recovery diode (SRD, snap-off diode or charge-storage diode or memory varactor [a]) is a semiconductor junction diode with the ability to generate extremely short pulses. It has a variety of uses in microwave (MHz to GHz range) electronics as pulse generator or parametric amplifier .

  9. Schottky transistor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schottky_transistor

    In 1956, Richard Baker described some discrete diode clamp circuits to keep transistors from saturating. [2] The circuits are now known as Baker clamps.One of those clamp circuits used a single germanium diode to clamp a silicon transistor in a circuit configuration that is the same as the Schottky transistor.