A relay is an electrically operated switch. Many relays use an
electromagnet to operate a switching mechanism, but other operating principles
are used. Relays find applications where it is necessary to control a circuit
by a low-power signal, or where several circuits must be controlled by one
signal. moving parts, instead using a semiconductor device triggered by light
to perform switching. Relays with calibrated operating characteristics and
sometimes multiple operating coils are used to protect electrical circuits from
overload or faults; in modern electric power systems these functions are
performed by digital instruments still called "protection relays".The
first relays were used in long distance telegraph circuits, repeating the
signal coming in from one circuit and re-transmitting it to another. Relays
found extensive use in telephone exchanges and early computers to perform
logical operations. A type of relay that can handle the high power required to
directly drive an electric motor is called a contactor.
It consists of a coil of wire surrounding a soft iron core, an iron
yoke, which provides a low reluctance path for
magnetic flux, a movable iron armature,
and a set, or sets, of contacts; two in the relay pictured. The armature is
hinged to the yoke and mechanically linked to a moving contact or contacts. It
is held in place by a spring
so that when the relay is de-energised there is an air gap in the magnetic
circuit. In this condition, one of the two sets of contacts in the relay
pictured is closed, and the other set is open. Other relays may have more or
fewer sets of contacts depending on their function. The relay in the picture
also has a wire connecting the armature to the yoke. This ensures continuity of
the circuit between the moving contacts on the armature, and the circuit track
on the Printed
Circuit Board (PCB) via the yoke, which is soldered to the PCB.
When an electric
current is passed through the coil, the resulting magnetic field attracts
the armature, and the consequent movement of the movable contact or contacts
either makes or breaks a connection with a fixed contact. If the set of
contacts was closed when the relay was de-energised, then the movement opens
the contacts and breaks the connection, and vice versa if the contacts were
open. When the current to the coil is switched off, the armature is returned by
a force, approximately half as strong as the magnetic force, to its relaxed
position. Usually this force is provided by a spring, but gravity is also used
commonly in industrial motor starters. Most relays are manufactured to operate
quickly. In a low voltage application, this is to reduce noise. In a high
voltage or high current application, this is to reduce arcing.
If the coil is energized with DC, a diode is frequently
installed across the coil, to dissipate the energy from the collapsing magnetic
field at deactivation, which would otherwise generate a voltage spike dangerous
to circuit components. Some automotive relays already include that diode inside
the relay case. Alternatively a contact protection network, consisting of a
capacitor and resistor in series, may absorb the surge. If the coil is designed
to be energized with AC, a small copper ring can be crimped to the end of the solenoid.
This "shading ring" creates a small out-of-phase current, which
increases the minimum pull on the armature during the AC cycle.By analogy with
the functions of the original electromagnetic device, a solid-state relay is
made with a Thrusters or
other solid-state switching device. To achieve electrical isolation an opt coupler can be used
which is a light-emitting
diode (LED) coupled with a photo transistor.
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