The New and Improved Way 
Instead of diverting energy from the light bulb into a resistor, modern
resistors rapidly shut the light circuit off and on to reduce the total
amount of energy flowing through the circuit. The light bulb circuit is
switched off many times every second. 

The switching cycle is built around the fluctuation of household alternating
current (AC). AC current has varying voltage polarity -- in an undulating
sine wave, it fluctuates from a positive voltage to a negative voltage. To
put it another way, the moving charge that makes up AC current is constantly
changing direction. In the United States, it goes through one cycle (moving
one way, then the other) 60 times a second. The diagram below shows this
sixtieth-of-a-second cycle. 

Picture (Metafile)       
A modern dimmer switch "chops up" the sine wave. It automatically shuts the
light bulb circuit off every time the current reverses direction -- that is,
whenever there is zero voltage running through the circuit. This happens
twice per cycle, or 120 times a second. It turns the light circuit back on
when the voltage climbs back up to a certain level. 

Picture (Metafile)       
This "turn-on value" is based on the position of the dimmer switch's knob or
slider. If the dimmer is turned to a brighter setting, it will switch on
very quickly after cutting off. The circuit is turned on for most of the
cycle, so it supplies more energy per second to the light bulb. If the
dimmer is set for lower light, it will wait until later in the cycle to turn
back on. 

That's the basic concept, but how does the dimmer actually do all of this?
In the next couple of sections, we'll look at the simple circuitry that
makes it work.

In the last section, we saw that a dimmer switch rapidly turns a light
circuit on and off to reduce the energy flowing to a light switch. The
central element in this switching circuit is a triode alternating current
switch, or triac. 

A triac is a small semiconductor <http://www.howstuffworks.com/diode.htm>
device, similar to a diode or transistor. Like a transistor, a triac is made
up of different layers of semiconductor material. This includes N-type
material, which has many free electrons, and P-type material, which has many
"holes" where free electrons can go. For an explanation of these materials,
check out How <http://www.howstuffworks.com/diode.htm>  Semiconductors Work.
And, for a demonstration of how these materials work in a simple transistor,
see How Amplifiers Work <http://www.howstuffworks.com/amplifier.htm> . 

Here's how the N-type and P-type material is arranged in a triac. 

Picture (Metafile)       
You can see that the triac has two terminals, which are wired into two ends
of the circuit. There is always a voltage difference between the two
terminals, but it changes with the fluctuation of the alternating current.
That is, when current moves one way, the top terminal is positively charged
while the bottom terminal is negatively charged, and when the current moves
the other way the top terminal is negatively charged while the bottom
terminal is positively charged. 

The gate is also wired into the circuit, by way of a variable resistor. This
variable resistor works the same basic way as the variable resistor in the
old dimmer switch design, but it doesn't waste nearly as much energy
generating heat. You can see how the variable resistor fits into the circuit
in the diagram below. 

Picture (Metafile)       
So what's going here? In a nutshell: 

*       The triac acts as a voltage-driven switch. 
*       The voltage on the gate controls the switching action. 
*       The variable resistor controls the voltage on the gate.

The Circuit 
When there is "normal" voltage across the terminals and little voltage on
the gate, the triac will act as an open switch -- it won't conduct
electricity. This is because the electrons from the N-type material fill in
holes along the border with the P-type material, creating depletion zones,
insulated areas where there are few free electrons or holes (see this page
<http://www.howstuffworks.com/led1.htm>  for a full explanation of depletion
zones). 

If you apply a strong enough voltage to the gate, it will disrupt the
depletion zones so electrons can move across the triac. The exact sequence
varies depending on the direction of the current -- that is, which part of
the AC cycle you're in. Let's say the current is flowing so the top terminal
is negatively charged and bottom terminal is positively charged. The circuit
is arranged so that the voltage boost on the gate will have the same charge
as the top terminal. So we get something that looks like this: 

Picture (Metafile)       
When the gate is "charged," the voltage difference between the gate and the
lower terminal is strong enough to get electrons moving between them. Moving
electrons out of the N-type material -- area e -- disrupts the depletion
zone between areas e and d. Introducing more free electrons into area d
disrupts the depletion zone between d and c. Electrons from area c can move
toward the bottom terminal, jumping from hole to hole in area d. This
introduces more holes into area c, which gets electrons moving out of the
depletion zone between c and b. The voltage is strong enough to drive
electrons from area a into the holes in area b, disrupting the last
depletion zone. With the depletion zones dispersed, electrons can move
freely from the top terminal to the bottom terminal -- the triac is now
conductive! (Note: Some dimmer switches also contain a similar semiconductor
device called a diac, in addition to a triac. These circuits work in the
same basic way.) 

In order for the triac to start conducting electricity between its two
terminals, it needs a voltage boost on its gate. The required voltage level
doesn't change, but you can adjust how long it takes the gate to "charge up"
to this voltage. This is where the variable resistor and the firing
capacitor come in. 

Picture (Metafile)       
Current passes through the variable resistor and charges the firing
capacitor (current builds up electrical charge on the capacitor's plates --
see How Capacitors Work <http://www.howstuffworks.com/capacitor.htm>  for
more information). When the capacitor builds up a certain amount of charge,
it has the necessary voltage to conduct current from the gate to the bottom
terminal. It discharges, making the triac conductive. 

Turning the dimmer switch knob pivots the contact arm (or contact plate) on
the variable resistor, increasing or decreasing its total resistance. When
the knob is set to "dim," the variable resistor offers greater resistance so
it "holds up" the current. As a result, the necessary boost voltage doesn't
build up as quickly on the firing capacitor. By the time the capacitor is
charged enough to make the triac conductive, the AC current cycle is well
underway. If you turn the knob the other way, the variable resistor offers
less resistance and the capacitor gets up to the necessary boost voltage
earlier in the fluctuating cycle. 

Picture (Metafile)
The variable resistor from a basic dimmer switch       
As soon as the current fluctuates back to the zero voltage point, there is
nothing driving current through the triac, so the electrons stop moving. The
depletion zones form again, and the triac loses its conductivity until the
boost voltage builds up on the gate. 

This system works very well, but it does create an odd problem: It tends to
produce a distinctive buzzing in the light bulb. In the next section, we'll
find out why this is.

Dimmer Buzzing 
If you hook up a really cheap dimmer switch, you may notice a strange
buzzing noise. This comes from vibrations in the bulb filament caused by the
chopped-up current coming from the triac. 

If you've read How <http://www.howstuffworks.com/electromagnet.htm>
Electromagnets Work, you know that electricity flowing through a coiled
length of wire generates a substantial magnetic field, and fluctuating
current generates a fluctuating magnetic field. If you've read How Light
Bulbs Work <http://www.howstuffworks.com/light-bulb.htm%20> , you know that
the filament at the heart of a light bulb is just a coiled length of wire.
It makes sense, then, that this coiled filament becomes magnetic whenever
you pass current through it, and the magnetic field fluctuates with the AC
current. 

Normal undulating AC current fluctuates gradually, so the magnetic field
does, too. The chopped-up current from a dimmer switch, on the other hand,
jumps in voltage suddenly whenever the triac becomes conductive. This sudden
shift in voltage changes the magnetic field abruptly, which can cause the
filament to vibrate -- it's rapidly drawn to and repelled by the metal arms
holding it in place. In addition to producing a soft buzzing sound, the
abruptly shifting magnetic field will generate weak radio signals
<http://www.howstuffworks.com/radio.htm>  that can cause interference on
nearby TVs <http://www.howstuffworks.com/tv.htm>  or radios
<http://www.howstuffworks.com/radio.htm> ! 

Better dimmer switches have extra components to squelch the buzzing effect.
Typically, the dimmer circuit includes an inductor choke, a length of wire
wrapped around an iron <http://www.howstuffworks.com/iron.htm>  core, and an
additional interference capacitor. Both devices can temporarily store
electrical charge and release it later. This "extra current" works to smooth
out the sharp voltage jumps caused by the triac-switching to reduce buzzing
and radio interference.

  
  

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to