A rectifier is an
electrical device that converts alternating current (AC),
which periodically reverses direction, to direct current (DC), which is in only one direction, a process known as rectification. Rectifiers have many
uses including as components of power supplies and as detectors of radio signals. Rectifiers may be made of solid state diodes, vacuum tube diodes, mercury arc valves, and other components. A device which performs the opposite
function (converting DC to AC) is known as an inverter. When only one diode is
used to rectify AC (by blocking the negative or positive portion of the waveform), the difference between the term diode and the term rectifier
is merely one of usage, i.e., the term rectifier describes a diode
that is being used to convert AC to DC. Almost all rectifiers comprise a number
of diodes in a specific arrangement for more efficiently converting AC to DC
than is possible with only one diode. Early radio receivers, called crystal radios, used a "cat's whisker" of fine wire pressing on a crystal of galena (lead sulfide) to serve as a point-contact rectifier or "crystal detector".
Rectification may occasionally serve in roles other than to generate direct
current per se. For example, in gas heating systems flame rectification
is used to detect presence of flame. Two metal electrodes in the outer layer of
the flame provide a current path, and rectification of an applied alternating
voltage
will happen in the plasma, but only while the flame is present to generate it.
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