Mobile Bug Project Report
Mobile Bug Project Report
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
ABSTRACT
This handy, pocket-size mobile transmission detector or sniffer can sense the
presence of an activated mobile cell phone from a distance of one and-a-half
meters. So it can be used to prevent use of mobile phones in examination
halls, confidential rooms, etc. It is also useful for detecting the use of mobile
phone for Spying and unauthorized video transmission. The circuit can detect
the incoming and outgoing calls, SMS and video transmission even if the
mobile phone is kept in the silent mode. The moment the Bug detects RF
transmission signal from an activated mobile phone, it starts sounding a
beep alarm and the LED blinks. The alarm continues until the signal
transmission ceases. Assemble the circuit on a general purpose PCB as
compact as possible and enclose in a small box like junk mobile case. As
mentioned earlier, capacitor C3 should have a lead length of 18 mm with
lead spacing of 8 mm. Carefully solder the capacitor in standing position with
equal spacing of the leads. The response can be optimized by trimming the
lead length of C3 for the desired frequency. You may use a short telescopic
type antenna.
Use the miniature 12V battery of a remote control and a small buzzer to
make the gadget pocket-size. The unit will give the warning indication if
someone uses Mobile phone within a radius of 1.5 meters.
INDEX
Demo Circuit
Mobile Bug
Normally IC1 is off. So IC2 will be also off. When the power is switched on, as stated above,
IC1 will give a high output and T1 conducts to trigger LED and Buzzer .This can be a good
indication for the working of the circuit.
(2) CIRCUIT DIAGRAM
(3) DESCRIPTION
An ordinary RF detector using tuned LC circuits is not suitable for detecting signals in the GHz
frequency band used in mobile phones. The transmission frequency of mobile phones ranges
from 0.9 to 3 GHz with a wavelength of 3.3 to 10 cm. So a circuit detecting gigahertz signals is
required for a mobilebug. Here the circuit uses a 0.22?F disk capacitor (C3) to capture the RF
signals from the mobile phone. The lead length of the capacitor is fixed as 18 mm with a spacing
of 8 mm between the leads to get the desired frequency. The disk capacitor along with the leads
acts as a small gigahertz loop antenna to collect the RF signals from the mobile phone.
Op-amp IC CA3130 (IC1) is used in the circuit as a current-to-voltage converter with capacitor
C3 connected between its inverting and non-inverting inputs. It is a CMOS version using gate-
protected p-channel MOSFET transistors in the input to provide very high input impedance, very
low input current and very high speed of performance. The output CMOS transistor is capable of
swinging the output voltage to within 10 mV of either supply voltage terminal.
Capacitor C3 in conjunction with the lead inductance acts as a transmission line that intercepts
the signals from the mobile phone. This capacitor creates a field, stores energy and transfers the
stored energy in the form of minute current to the inputs of IC1. This will upset the balanced
input of IC1 and convert the current into the corresponding output voltage.
Capacitor C4 along with high-value resistor R1 keeps the non-inverting input stable for easy
swing of the output to high state. Resistor R2 provides the discharge path for capacitor C4.
Feedback resistor R3 makes the inverting input high when the output becomes high. Capacitor
C5 (47pF) is connected across ‘strobe’ (pin 0 and ‘null’ inputs (pin 1) of IC1 for phase
compensation and gain control to optimise the frequency response.
When the mobile phone signal is detected by C3, the output of IC1 becomes high and low
alternately according to the frequency of the signal as indicated by LED1. This triggers
monostable timer IC2 through capacitor C7. Capacitor C6 maintains the base bias of transistor
T1 for fast switching action. The low-value timing components R6 and C9 produce very short
time delay to avoid audio nuisance.
CONCEPT
Mobile phone uses RF with a wavelength of 30cm at 872 to 2170 MHz. That is the signal is high
frequency with huge energy. When the mobile phone is active, it transmits the signal in the form
of sine wave which passes through the space. The encoded audio/video signal contains
electromagnetic radiation which is picked up by the receiver in the base station. Mobile phone
system is referred to as “Cellular Telephone system” because the coverage area is divided into
“cells” each of which has a base station. The transmitter power of the modern 2G antenna in the
base station is 20-100 watts.
When a GSM (Global System of Mobile communication) digital phone is transmitting, the signal
is time shared with 7 other users. That is at any one second, each of the 8 users on the same
frequency is allotted 1/8 of the time and the signal is reconstituted by the receiver to form the
speech. Peak power output of a mobile phone corresponds to 2 watts with an average of 250 milli
watts of continuous power. Each handset with in a ‘cell’ is allotted a particular frequency for its
use. The mobile phone transmits short signals at regular intervals to register its availability to the
nearest base station. The network data base stores the information transmitted by the mobile
phone. If the mobile phone moves from one cell to another, it will keep the connection with the
base station having strongest transmission. Mobile phone always tries to make connection with
the available base station. That is why, the back light of the phone turns on intermittently while
traveling. This will cause severe battery drain. So in long journeys, battery will flat with in a few
hours.
AM Radio uses frequencies between 180 kHz and 1.6 MHz. FM radio uses 88 to 180 MHz. TV
uses 470 to 854 MHz. Waves at higher frequencies but with in the RF region is called Micro
waves. Mobile phone uses high frequency RF wave in the micro wave region carrying huge
amount of electromagnetic energy. That is why burning sensation develops in the ear if the
mobile is used for a long period. Just like a micro wave oven, mobile phone is ‘cooking’ the
tissues in the ear. RF radiation from the phone causes oscillation of polar molecules like water in
the tissues. This generates heat through friction just like the principle of microwave oven. The
strongest radiation from the mobile phone is about 2 watts which can make connection with a
base station located 2 to 3 km away.
How the circuit works?
Ordinary LC (Coil-Capacitor) circuits are used to detect low frequency radiation in the AM and
FM bands. The tuned tank circuit having a coil and a variable capacitor retrieve the signal from
the carrier wave. But such LC circuits cannot detect high frequency waves near the microwave
region. Hence in the circuit, a capacitor is used to detect RF from mobile phone considering that,
a capacitor can store energy even from an outside source and oscillate like LC circuit.
R5 100R
BUZZER
Use of capacitor
A capacitor has two electrodes separated by a ‘dielectric’ like paper, mica etc. The non polarized
disc capacitor is used to pass AC and not DC. Capacitor can store energy and pass AC signals
during discharge. 0.22 capacitor is selected because it is a low value one and has large surface
area to accept energy from the mobile radiation. To detect the signal, the sensor part should be
like an aerial. So the capacitor is arranged as a mini loop aerial (similar to the dipole antenna
used in TV).In short with this arrangement, the capacitor works like an air core coil with ability
to oscillate and discharge current.
How the capacitor senses RF?
One lead of the capacitor gets DC from the positive rail and the other lead goes to the negative
input of IC1. So the capacitor gets energy for storage. This energy is applied to the inputs of IC1
so that the inputs of IC are almost balanced with 1.4 volts. In this state output is zero. But at any
time IC can give a high output if a small current is induced to its inputs. There a natural
electromagnetic field around the capacitor caused by the 50Hz from electrical wiring. When the
mobile phone radiates high energy pulsations, capacitor oscillates and release energy in the
inputs of IC. This oscillation is indicated by the flashing of the LED and beeping of Buzzer. In
short, capacitor carries energy and is in an electromagnetic field. So a slight change in field
caused by the RF from phone will disturb the field and forces the capacitor to release energy.
RESISTORE
1. R1 ________2.2M
2. R2 ________100K
3. R3 ________2.2M
4. R4 ________1K
5. R5________12K
6. R6________15K
CAPACITOR
7. C1 ________22P
8. C2 ________22P
9. C3 ________0.22 µF
10. C4 ________100 µF
11. C5_________47P
12. C6 _________0.1 µF
13. C7_________ 0.1 µF
14. C8_________ 0.01 µF
15. C9__________4.7 µF
16. IC CA3130
17. IC NE555
18. T1 BC548
19. LED
20. ANTENNA
21. PIEZO BUZZER
HOW IC WORK?
ROLE OF IC CA 3130
This IC is a 15 MHz BiMOS Operational amplifier with MOSFET inputs and Bipolar output.
The inputs contain MOSFET transistors to provide very high input impedance and very low
input current as low as 10pA. It has high speed of performance and suitable for low input current
applications.
CA3130A and CA3130 are op amps that combine the advantage of both CMOS and bipolar
transistors. Gate-protected P-Channel MOSFET (PMOS) transistors are used in the input circuit
to provide very-high-input impedance, very-low-input current, and exceptional speed
performance. The use of PMOS transistors in the input stage results in common-mode input-
voltage capability down to0.5V below the negative-supply terminal, an important attribute in
single-supply applications.
A CMOS transistor-pair, capable of swinging the output voltage to within 10mV of either
supply-voltage terminal (at very high values of load impedance), is employed as the output
circuit.
The CA3130 Series circuits operate at supply voltages ranging from 5V to 16V, ( 2 .5V to
8V). They can be phase compensated with a single external capacitor, and have terminals
for adjustment of offset voltage for applications
requiring offset-null capability. Terminal provisions are also made to permit strobing of the
output stage. The CA3130A offers superior input characteristics over those of the CA3130.
Features
Applications
• Ground-Referenced Single Supply Amplifiers
• Fast Sample-Hold Amplifiers
• Long-Duration Timers/ Mono stables
• High-Input-Impedance Comparators (Ideal Interface with Digital CMOS)
• High-Input-Impedance Wideband Amplifiers
• Voltage Followers (e.g. Follower for Single-Supply D/A Converter )
• Voltage Regulators (Permits Control of Output Voltage Down to 0V)
• Peak Detectors
• Single-Supply Full-Wave Precision Rectifiers
• Photo-Diode Sensor Amplifiers
DETAILS OF PIN
Features
• High Current Drive Capability (200mA)
• Adjustable Duty Cycle
• Temperature Stability of 0.005%/ C
• Timing From Sec to Hours
• Turn off Time Less Than 2Sec
Applications
• Precision Timing
• Pulse Generation
• Time Delay Generation
• Sequential Timing
1. RESISTOR
Resistor
Three resistors
Type Passive
Electronic symbol
(Europe)
(US)
A resistor is a two-terminal electronic component that produces a voltage across its terminals that
is proportional to the electric current through it in accordance with Ohm's law:
V = IR
Resistors are elements of electrical networks and electronic circuits and are ubiquitous in most
electronic equipment. Practical resistors can be made of various compounds and films, as well as
resistance wire (wire made of a high-resistivity alloy, such as nickel/chrome).The primary
characteristics of a resistor are the resistance, the tolerance, maximum working voltage and the
power rating. Other characteristics include temperature coefficient, noise, and inductance. Less
well-known is critical resistance, the value below which power dissipation limits the maximum
permitted current flow, and above which the limit is applied voltage. Critical resistance depends
upon the materials constituting the resistor as well as its physical dimensions; it's determined by
design.Resistors can be integrated into hybrid and printed circuits, as well as integrated circuits.
Size, and position of leads (or terminals) are relevant to equipment designers; resistors must be
physically large enough not to overheat when dissipating their power.
2. CAPACITOR
.
Capacitor
Capacitors are widely used in electronic circuits to block the flow of direct current while
allowing alternating current to pass, to filter out interference, to smooth the output of power
supplies, and for many other purposes. They are used in resonant circuits in radio frequency
equipment to select particular frequencies from a signal with many frequencies.
(1)Ceramic capacitor
ceramic capacitors
A ceramic capacitor is a two-terminal, non-polar device. The classical ceramic capacitor is the
"disc capacitor". This device pre-dates the transistor and was used extensively in vacuum-tube
equipment (e.g., radio receivers) from about 1930 through the 1950s, and in discrete transistor
equipment from the 1950s through the 1980s. As of 2007, ceramic disc capacitors are in
widespread use in electronic equipment, providing high capacity & small size at low price
compared to other low value capacitor types.
(2)Electrolytic capacitor
An electrolytic capacitor is a type of capacitor that uses an ionic conducting liquid as one of its
plates with a larger capacitance per unit volume than other types. They are valuable in relatively
high-current and low-frequency electrical circuits. This is especially the case in power-supply
filters, where they store charge needed to moderate output voltage and current fluctuations in
rectifier output. They are also widely used as coupling capacitors in circuits where AC should be
conducted but DC should not.
Electrolytic capacitors can have a very high capacitance, allowing filters made with them to have
very low corner frequencies.
(3)Transistor
.
The transistor is the fundamental building block of modern electronic devices, and its presence is
ubiquitous in modern electronic systems.
Usage
The bipolar junction transistor, or BJT, was the most commonly used transistor in the 1960s and
70s. Even after MOSFETs became widely available, the BJT remained the transistor of choice
for many analog circuits such as simple amplifiers because of their greater linearity and ease of
manufacture. Desirable properties of MOSFETs, such as their utility in low-power devices,
usually in the CMOS configuration, allowed them to capture nearly all market share for digital
circuits; more recently MOSFETs have captured most analog and power applications as well,
including modern clocked analog circuits, voltage regulators, amplifiers, power transmitters,
motor drivers, etc
Advantages
The key advantages that have allowed transistors to replace their vacuum tube predecessors in
most applications are
• Small size and minimal weight, allowing the development of miniaturized electronic
devices.
• Highly automated manufacturing processes, resulting in low per-unit cost.
• Lower possible operating voltages, making transistors suitable for small, battery-powered
applications.
• No warm-up period for cathode heaters required after power application.
• Lower power dissipation and generally greater energy efficiency.
• Higher reliability and greater physical ruggedness.
• Extremely long life. Some transistorized devices have been in service for more than 30
years.
• Complementary devices available, facilitating the design of complementary-symmetry
circuits, something not possible with vacuum tubes.
• Insensitivity to mechanical shock and vibration, thus avoiding the problem of
microphonics in audio applications.
Limitations
• Silicon transistors do not operate at voltages higher than about 1,000 volts (SiC devices
can be operated as high as 3,000 volts). In contrast, electron tubes have been developed
that can be operated at tens of thousands of volts.
• High power, high frequency operation, such as used in over-the-air television
broadcasting, is better achieved in electron tubes due to improved electron mobility in a
vacuum.
• On average, a higher degree of amplification linearity can be achieved in electron tubes
as compared to equivalent solid state devices, a characteristic that may be important in
high fidelity audio reproduction.
• Silicon transistors are much more sensitive than electron tubes to an electromagnetic
pulse, such as generated by an atmospheric nuclear explosion.
Type
The bipolar junction transistor (BJT) was the first type of transistor to be mass-produced. Bipolar
transistors are so named because they conduct by using both majority and minority carriers. The
three terminals of the BJT are named emitter, base, and collector. The BJT consists of two p-n
junctions: the base–emitter junction and the base–collector junction, separated by a thin region of
semiconductor known as the base region (two junction diodes wired together without sharing an
intervening semiconducting region will not make a transistor). "The [BJT] is useful in amplifiers
because the currents at the emitter and collector are controllable by the relatively small base
current."[14] In an NPN transistor operating in the active region, the emitter-base junction is
forward biased (electrons and holes recombine at the junction), and electrons are injected into the
base region. Because the base is narrow, most of these electrons will diffuse into the reverse-
biased (electrons and holes are formed at, and move away from the junction) base-collector
junction and be swept into the collector; perhaps one-hundredth of the electrons will recombine
in the base, which is the dominant mechanism in the base current. By controlling the number of
electrons that can leave the base, the number of electrons entering the collector can be controlled.
[14]
Collector current is approximately β (common-emitter current gain) times the base current. It
is typically greater than 100 for small-signal transistors but can be smaller in transistors designed
for high-power applications.
Unlike the FET, the BJT is a low–input-impedance device. Also, as the base–emitter voltage
(Vbe) is increased the base–emitter current and hence the collector–emitter current (Ice) increase
exponentially according to the Shockley diode modeland the Ebers-Moll model. Because of this
exponential relationship, the BJT has a higher transconductance than the FET.
Bipolar transistors can be made to conduct by exposure to light, since absorption of photons in
the base region generates a photocurrent that acts as a base current; the collector current is
approximately β times the photocurrent. Devices designed for this purpose have a transparent
window in the package and are called phototransistors.
(4)Light-emitting diode
.
Light-emitting diode
Passive,
optoelectronic
Type
Working principle Electroluminescence
Nick Holonyak Jr.
Invented
(1962)
Electronic symbol
A light-emitting diode (LED) is an electronic light source. LEDs are used as indicator lamps in
many kinds of electronics and increasingly for lighting. LEDs work by the effect of
electroluminescence, discovered by accident in 1907. The LED was introduced as a practical
electronic component in 1962. All early devices emitted low-intensity red light, but modern
LEDs are available across the visible, ultraviolet and infra red wavelengths, with very high
brightness.
LEDs are based on the semiconductor diode. When the diode is forward biased (switched on),
electrons are able to recombine with holes and energy is released in the form of light. This effect
is called electroluminescence and the color of the light is determined by the energy gap of the
semiconductor. The LED is usually small in area (less than 1 mm2) with integrated optical
components to shape its radiation pattern and assist in reflection.[3]
LEDs present many advantages over traditional light sources including lower energy
consumption, longer lifetime, improved robustness, smaller size and faster switching. However,
they are relatively expensive and require more precise current and heat management than
traditional light sources.
Applications of LEDs are diverse. They are used as low-energy indicators but also for
replacements for traditional light sources in general lighting, automotive lighting and traffic
signals. The compact size of LEDs has allowed new text and video displays and sensors to be
developed, while their high switching rates are useful in communications technology.
(5)PIEZO BUZZER
Piezoelectricity is the ability of some materials (notably crystals and certain ceramics, including
bone) to generate an electric field or electric potential[1] in response to applied mechanical stress.
The effect is closely related to a change
of polarization density within the material's volume. If the material is not short-circuited, the
applied stress induces a voltage across the material. The word is derived from the Greek piezo or
piezein, which means to squeeze or press.
It most commonly consists of a number of switches or sensors connected to a control unit that
determines if and which button was pushed or a preset time has lapsed, and usually illuminates a
light on the appropriate button or control panel, and sounds a warning in the form of a
continuous or intermittent buzzing or beeping sound.
Initially this device was based on an electromechanical system which was identical to an electric
bell without the metal gong (which makes the ringing noise). Often these units were anchored to
a wall or ceiling and used the ceiling or wall as a sounding board. Another implementation with
some AC-connected devices was to implement a circuit to make the AC current into a noise loud
enough to drive a loudspeaker and hook this circuit up to an 8-ohm speaker. Nowadays, it is
more popular to use a ceramic-based piezoelectric sounder which makes a high-pitched tone.
Usually these were hooked up to "driver" circuits which varied the pitch of the sound or pulsed
the sound on and off.
In game shows it is also known as a "lockout system" because when one person signals ("buzzes
in"), all others are locked out from signalling. Several game shows have large buzzer buttons
which are identified as "plungers". The buzzer is also used to signal wrong answers and when
time expires on many game shows, such as Wheel of Fortune, Family Feud and The Price is
Right.
The word "buzzer" comes from the rasping noise that buzzers made when they were
electromechanical devices, operated from stepped-down AC line voltage at 50 or 60 cycles.
Other sounds commonly used to indicate that a button has been pressed are a ring or a beep.
(8) APPLICATION
• It is also useful for detecting the use of mobile phone for spying and
unauthorised video transmission.
• It is useful where the use of mobile phone is prohibited Like petrol pumps and gas
stations, historical places, religious places and court of laws
(9) LIMITATION
(11) CONCLUSION
confidential rooms, etc. It is also useful for detecting the use of mobile phone for
12) DATASHEETS
1. IC CA 3130
2. IC NE 555 TIMER
(13) REFERENCE
• www.google.com
• www.wikipedia.org
• www.pdfmachine.com
• www.efymag.com
• www.datasheets4u.com