How Can You Energize a 5V Switch Using a Microphone with 250mV Output?

  • Thread starter Thread starter hogrampage
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Electronic Switch
AI Thread Summary
To energize a 5V switch using a microphone with a 250mV output, the microphone signal must be amplified to meet the switch's voltage requirement. An instrumentation amplifier can be used to boost the microphone's output, allowing for detection of when the signal exceeds a specified threshold. This detection can trigger a relay that closes the switch, maintaining the drive for a short duration after the speaking stops. The circuit design should focus on ensuring the amplified signal reliably activates the switch without needing high fidelity. Proper wiring and component selection are crucial for effective operation.
hogrampage
Messages
107
Reaction score
1

Homework Statement


You're given an electronic switch which requires 5V at 1mA in order to close; it is open with no voltage present at its input. If the only microphone available produces a peak voltage of 250mV, design a circuit which will energize the switch when someone speaks into the microphone.

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution


I really don't know how to start. Would I use an instrumentation amplifier or something else? If so, how would it be wired? Where would the signal from the microphone go?

Thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
hogrampage said:

Homework Statement


You're given an electronic switch which requires 5V at 1mA in order to close; it is open with no voltage present at its input. If the only microphone available produces a peak voltage of 250mV, design a circuit which will energize the switch when someone speaks into the microphone.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I really don't know how to start. Would I use an instrumentation amplifier or something else? If so, how would it be wired? Where would the signal from the microphone go?

Thanks

You do need to amplify the signal, then detect when it is above some threshold, and have that detection trigger the drive to the relay and hold that drive steady for some time period (like for the duration of the speaking plus a couple of seconds maybe). The amplification does not need to be high fidelity -- you are just looking for when the signal from the microphone is above some detection threshold...
 
Back
Top