Sign In

11.9 : Full wave rectifier

A full-wave rectifier is a device that converts alternating current (AC) to direct current (DC) and is more efficient than its half-wave counterpart. It typically includes a center-tapped transformer, two diodes, and a load resistor. The secondary winding of the transformer is divided to provide two equal voltages of opposite polarities, which is the pivotal element of full-wave rectification.

Figure 1

The full-wave rectifier operates by allowing each diode to conduct during alternate half-cycles of the AC input, utilizing the full cycle of the AC waveform. During the positive half-cycle of the AC signal, diode D1 becomes forward-biased and conducts, while diode D2 is reverse-biased and does not conduct. This creates a positive output similar to that of a half-wave rectifier.

When the AC signal enters the negative half-cycle, diode D1 is reverse-biased and non-conductive, while diode D2 is forward-biased, allowing the current to flow through it. This process flips the negative voltage to a positive one at the output, ensuring that the output voltage is always of the same polarity. The load resistor sees a unidirectional current, leading to a unipolar output waveform.

Full-wave rectifiers have higher rectification efficiency and are extensively used in power supply units, battery chargers, audio amplifiers, and signal-processing applications. The ripple voltage is lower, and the ripple frequency is double that of a half-wave rectifier, yielding smoother DC output with less filtering requirement.

The peak inverse voltage (PIV) in a full-wave rectifier is twice the maximum input AC voltage(VS) reduced by the diodes' forward voltage drop (VD).

Equation 1

This PIV is approximately double that encountered in a half-wave rectifier, requiring diodes that can sustain higher reverse voltages to ensure safe operation.

Tags
Full wave RectifierAlternating Current ACDirect Current DCCenter tapped TransformerDiodesLoad ResistorRectificationPositive Half cycleNegative Half cycleUnidirectional CurrentUnipolar Output WaveformRectification EfficiencyPower Supply UnitsBattery ChargersAudio AmplifiersSignal processing ApplicationsRipple VoltageRipple FrequencyPeak Inverse Voltage PIVDiode Forward Voltage Drop

From Chapter 11:

article

Now Playing

11.9 : Full wave rectifier

Diodes

207 Views

article

11.1 : The Ideal Diode

Diodes

156 Views

article

11.2 : Diode: Forward bias

Diodes

297 Views

article

11.3 : Diode: Reverse bias

Diodes

129 Views

article

11.4 : Zener Diodes

Diodes

99 Views

article

11.5 : Modeling of Diode Forward Characteristics

Diodes

174 Views

article

11.6 : Small-signal Diode Model

Diodes

337 Views

article

11.7 : Modeling of Diode Reverse Characteristics

Diodes

53 Views

article

11.8 : Half wave rectifier

Diodes

227 Views

article

11.10 : Bridge rectifier

Diodes

178 Views

article

11.11 : Clipper Circuit

Diodes

94 Views

article

11.12 : Clamper Circuit

Diodes

160 Views

article

11.13 : Voltage Doubler Circuit

Diodes

180 Views

article

11.14 : Schottky Barrier Diode

Diodes

54 Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved