The Electronics Laboratory is where practical applications and experiments for the courses “Electrical and Electronic Measurements” and “Electronic and Digital Systems” are conducted. The most recent renovation of the facility took place in 2006.
Experimental studies involving diodes—considered the first step in analog electronics—controlled semiconductors, and clock signals, which are indispensable in the world of digital electronics, are conducted in our laboratory. Furthermore, this environment enables the implementation of current- and/or voltage-controlled electronic systems, as well as analog systems incorporating feedback structures.
A path of applications that begins with the world of digital signals—starting with the values zero and one—and extends through basic operations such as AND, OR, and NOT, all the way to stepper motor control, passes through this laboratory. The world of digital signals extends from computer systems to military systems located at the farthest reaches of the external world.
The laboratory’s experimental setup includes:
A breadboard that provides connection paths for circuit components,
A signal generator that supplies signals to be processed into the environment,
An oscilloscope that visually displays the signals generated on the circuit to the user,
A power supply that rectifies DC power required by the system from the AC grid and delivers it,
An analog and digital multifunction meter,
And 8 experiment kits that also include hand tools for performing physical operations on circuit components.
Additionally, this workspace includes spare parts for the components in the experiment kits and booklets containing information on the semiconductor materials to be used in the experiments.
Today, the Electronics Laboratory, located within the structure of Yıldız Technical University/Faculty of Electrical-Electronics Faculty/Control and Automation Engineering, hosts the Measurement Laboratory, the Analog Electronics Laboratory, and the Digital Electronics Laboratory—each of which is a course in its own right, separate from theoretical courses.
