Categories: Sharing experience, All about LEDs
Number of views: 22162
Comments on the article: 2

How to check the LED

 

LED is a rather gentle semiconductor device. If the current through it P-N junction If it becomes critically larger than the nominal, then overheating will begin and the thermal destruction of the crystal will not take long. Therefore, before checking the LED for serviceability, be prepared to be very careful not to accidentally spoil the workpiece.

Small round LEDs are designed for an operating voltage in the range of 2 to 4 volts, namely: red, yellow and green - up to 2.2 volts, and white and blue - up to 3.6 volts. The operating rated current of a small round LED usually does not exceed 10 - 20 milliamps, keep this in mind.

How to check the LED

Verification Method No. 1. 5 or 12 volt power supply and resistor

So, to check the LED, you first need to decide what you will use to check. If there is no multimeter at hand, then the first thing you can take is source of power with a known voltage ranging from 5 to 12 volts, but do not rush to connect an LED to it.

The next step will be to take resistorwhose rating will limit the current at a given voltage at the level of 5-10 mA. What does it mean? This means that if in a serial circuit with a resistor, the LED will have a voltage drop as needed - about 2 volts, then the resistor will have 3 or 10 volts (for a 5 or 12 volt power supply), therefore for a current of about 5 mA, according to the law Ohm, you need a 600 Ohm or 2000 Ohm resistor.

Choose a close rating from your existing ones, for example 560 Ohm or 2.2 kOhm - for a 5 or 12 volt power supply, respectively. Connect the LED through the resistor in series to the power source.

5 or 12 volt power supply and resistor

If you are dealing with a round or rectangular output LED, then its long leg connected to that internal electrode that looks smaller is the anode, it is connected to the plus of the power source. The short leg is to the minus of the power source, on its side the round lens of the LED near the base has a flat cut.

Connect the resistor to the long positive leg of the LED, and connect the entire circuit to the power source - for the short leg minus, for the resistor - plus. If the legs are cut off and it is not clear which one was long, then the minus is connected to the electrode, which appears larger inside the lens. So, if the LED is working, it will light up.


Verification Method No. 2. HFE multimeter

HFE multimeter

There is a second, very simple way to check the LED with legs, if you have on the farm multimeter with the function of measuring the parameters PNP and NPN transistors.

In this case, it is enough to insert the LED into the holes “C” and “E” of the transistor test socket: in the PNP connector with the long leg in “E”, the short one in “C”, or in the NPN connector with the long leg in “C” short - in "E".

A working LED will light up, because the device will apply a voltage of about 1.5 volts to it, which will be enough for a weak but visible light of the LED to understand that it is working.


Verification Method No. 3. LED diode with a multimeter as a regular diode

LED diode with a multimeter as a regular diode

Finally, the third way. Since the LED is primarily a semiconductor diode, you can ring it like a regular diode. Just turn on the multimeter in the diode dialing mode, and check your LED by touching the terminals of the tester with its probes.

A working LED will even light up a little, and on the multimeter display you will see the value of the voltage drop at the P-N junction in volts. Of course, a powerful LED designed for a relatively high voltage can’t be checked like this, you will have to use the first method, but low-power and even SMD LEDs, can be easily checked in such a simple way, even with the conditions when they are tightly mounted on a printed circuit board.

See also at i.electricianexp.com:

  • How to correctly calculate and choose a resistor for an LED
  • How to check a field effect transistor
  • How to make a backlit switch yourself
  • Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering for Computer Modding Lovers
  • About using LEDs, LED device, how to light an LED

  •  
     
    Comments:

    # 1 wrote: Vadim Gennadevich | [quote]

     
     

    Hello Andrey.
    Many thanks to you for interesting materials ....

    And what can you say about checking LEDs with flat batteries (CR 2032) - they have 3 Volts and no resistors are needed?

    About:Verification Method No. 3. The LED diode with a multimeter as a regular diode.
    But will it not be a fatal check by a tester with an internal battery of 9 arbitrary “Krona”. Familiar elevators told me that they were forbidden to ring out electronics with testers with a 9Volt battery — only 1.5 ... 3Volts ???

     
    Comments:

    # 2 wrote: Andrew | [quote]

     
     

    Vadim Gennadevich, LEDs can be dialed. This is not exactly the electronics that your friends lifters had in mind. The voltage on the probes of the millimeter in the provoning mode is much less than 9 volts (depending on the type of multimeter). It is probably possible to accidentally burn any microcircuit, but the LED is a little real. By the way, many multimeters have an LV mode for dialing electronic circuits. Testing with a CR2032 battery is possible without a resistor with a short touch.