Standard two terminal current source. It's effectively a FET with the gate tied to (I think) the source.
Regards
Mike Rigby-Jones
-----Original Message-----
From: Don Holtz [SMTP:daholtz@AXIONET.COM]
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 1999 7:28 AM
To: PICLIST@MITVMA.MIT.EDU
Subject: [OT] Interesting discrete device?!
Hello:
I was recently in Japan, and visited Akihabara. While there I picked up a
handful of really bright White LEDs. With each LED the vendor also gave me
an interesting discrete device that looks like a standard small-signal
glass encapsulated diode.
I don't speak Japanese but I was able to get the vendor to draw a simple
schematic, since I was confused about the device.
The device appears to be a "current regulating diode" analogous to a
zener.... 15mA!
In this instance the LED and "current regulating diode" are placed in
series, and the combination can be driven with a voltage between 4V and 20V.
Further testing shows that below the "turn on" current level the device has
a fairly low impedance (approx. 200ohm), above the "turn on" current level
the device has a fairly high impedance of more than 100Kohm.
The only marking on the device is E153.
The symbol the vendor used in the schematic was a circle with a bar, kind
of like an arrow head with a bar (for a diode).
What is this device? Am I missing something simple?
Cheers,
Don