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Electronics Information Study Guide for McGraw-Hill's ASVAB (page 5)

By Dr. Janet E. Wall
McGraw-Hill Professional

SEMICONDUCTORS

So far, we've talked about insulators and conductors. But there is an important category of materials between these two categories.

A semiconductor can act as a conductor or as an insulator. Silicon, the main semiconductor, is the basis for computer memory and logic boards. Chemicals called dopantsare applied to the silicon to determine whether it will act as an insulator or as a conductor. They do this by making electrons available or not available to flow. (When electrons can flow, a material becomes a conductor.)

The basis for computer applications is a group of components, particularly transistors and diodes.

Transistorsare devices that can switch a current, regulate its flow, or amplify a current, all based on the presence of a smaller current. Millions of tiny transistors are built on small pieces of semiconductor, which are the basis of computer logic and memory.

Semiconductors

Diodesare devices that allow a current to flow in one direction only. In addition to electronics, diodes are also used in devices called rectifiers, which convert AC into DC.

Semiconductors

PRACTICAL ELECTRICITY

The ASVAB will also ask you about more practical matters, including simple electric circuits. You'll have an advantage here if you've ever worked on your home wiring (which is usually much easier than most people think).

In a simple electric circuit like the one in your home, electricity is distributed at a fuse box or circuit breaker box. The box has two functions:

  • Breaking up the load in the building into a number of circuits
  • Preventing excess current from flowing into the circuits

Many simple circuits have two separate conductors: hot and grounded. The hot conductor is usually black, but it can be red or another color. The grounded (sometimes called neutral) conductor is white. Together, the black and white wires are called the supplywires, because they form the circuit that electric current needs to travel.

To work safely on any electric circuit, you need to shut off the electricity, and check that it is off. The fuses and circuit breakers can shut off the circuit. Before starting work, use an electrical tester to test whether the hot wires are energized.

Bigger (heavier) wires can carry more current. Home wiring systems are usually rated for 15 or 20 amperes. 15-ampere circuits require 14-gauge wires. Larger, 12-gauge wires are needed for 20-ampere circuits.

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