Clayton B. Grantham
Write for Electronic Design
Clayton B. Grantham, test engineer, National Semiconductor Corp., Tucson, Ariz., received an MBEE and MSEE in electrical engineering from the University of Arizona, Tucson.
Email address: clayton.grantham@msc.com
7 results found for Clayton B. Grantham, displaying items 1 - 7

 

May 10, 2007   [Ideas For Design]
Germanium Dual-Boost Starts At 260 mV
No matter what portable power source you use, the lower the starting voltage your circuitry operates at, the better. A lower startup voltage also maximizes runtime. Furthermore, to completely discharge the power source, circuitry must run on ever-lower voltages and currents. Existing boost circuits can start up and drain a power source down to 1 V, but that still leaves too much unusable energy in a battery. Other power sources, like solar cells or micro-turbines,...

March 2, 2006   [Ideas For Design]
Battery Stack Drives Seven White LEDs
Illuminating more than one very bright white LED requires a choice of configuration, either series or parallel. Of course, each configuration has design tradeoffs. A parallel connection requires a lower voltage across each LED, yet ballast resistors or current sources are needed to accomplish matched light uniformity. Different levels of bias current, and thus light coming from each LED, create a disrupting light source. However, light matching with ballast resistors or current sources...

October 27, 2003   [Ideas For Design]
Single Alkaline Battery Drives White LED
Although the boost circuit in Figure 1 comes off as rather simple (only two npn transistors), its benefits include low startup voltage and long battery life. White LEDs have gained immediate popularity...

May 13, 2002   [Ideas For Design]
Supervisory IC Protects System Against Overvoltage Conditions
Careful design limits overvoltage on the supply input of integrated circuits, and avoids compromising an IC's specifications. Overvoltage damage can cause an immediate failure, or accelerate an early-life reliability failure. Older technology CMOS...

December 3, 2001   [Ideas For Design]
Simple LED Flasher Yields 99% Power Reduction
An LED is commonly used as a "power on" indicator for many electronic devices. For the LED to produce discernible visible light in daylight, the forward-bias current needs to be in the moderate range (10 to 20 mA). This amount of current may be too...

February 19, 2001   [Ideas For Design]
Precision Current Source Design Employs Bootstrapped Integrator
The general-purpose current source in Figure 1 is accurate within 1% and insensitive to temperature (less than 50 ppm/°C). It also has a high output resistance and a wide compliance range (4.3 to 34...

April 3, 2000   [Ideas For Design]
Internal Oven Provides Voltage Reference Less Than 1-ppm/°C Drift
When precision voltage-reference requirements demand less than 1-ppm/°C temperature drift, the designer can choose to use expensive components (off-the-shelf modules) or build a custom oven enclosure. This second choice is common among...










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