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Sine Shaping Circuit
08/02/2014 at 09:49 • 0 comments[Work in progress. I may decrease the number of diode branches for simplicity.]
Progress has been made on the sine wave output. Apparently you can use a technique called diode wave shaping to turn a triangle wave into a sine wave. Here's the paper I found: http://tinyurl.com/lew34ez
Here's the schematic I went with:
Here's a useful graph:
And here's another:
In the first graph, each of the red x are the points in the wave when another diode stage is turned on. The slope of each line segment is directly related to the voltage division ratio.
In the second graph, I called the curve that my circuit is being designed to follow the shaping curve. I basically chopped a quarter cycle sine wave into four equal segments and linearized each segment.
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Triangle core breadboarded
07/27/2014 at 08:39 • 0 commentsI've started prototyping. The first thing to do is make what I'm calling the triangle core. It's the only circuit that's generating an independent waveform. Everything else is a type of wave shaping.
I made a breadboard layout (If anyone knows of a better program than PEBBLE to use, please inform):
And then I put it on the breadboard:
Here's a video of the triangle and square waves changing frequency and symmetry (duty cycle):
The triangle sides aren't straight. I suspect either the capacitor or weird diode things. Also, the frequency range isn't as wide as I would like it. I suspect the diode of dropping too much voltage.
In any case, further testing is required!