IR transmitter connected to phone audio jack

infrared

I took an IR LED transmitter, and soldered it to a mono audio jack (positive pin to the left channel, negative to mass). Now, the LED is quite small, and I'm pretty sure that the phone audio output voltage is enough to power it on.

If I connect a multimeter to the jack and put it on the diode check mode, the LED turns on (I can see it glow violet using a camera). However, if I connect the jack to my phone, turn the volume at 100% and play a WAV file, the LED doesn't light.

I have searched the internet, and found that some other people had my same idea, however most of them used a stereo jack and soldered the LED pins to the Right and Left channels of the jack connector, and left mass unused.

I don't understand why is that, and why my LED doesn't work. Did I miss something?

Best Answer

http://www.instructables.com/id/DIY-Infrared-transmitter-for-iPhone-iPod/?ALLSTEPS This explains it pretty well but I'll expand a bit.

Since the audio signal is AC voltage it has negative and positive portions of the wave. By tying the grounds together and using the left and right signals as the +/- for the LED, the LED sees the voltage difference between the channels. If one channel is positive max and the other is negative max, this gives you more voltage than a single channel to ground. You use two LEDs so when one is reverse biased the other comes on (forward biased). You use a specific audio file in order to make sure when one channel is high the other is low (one is just the reverse wave of the other). WAV file obviously to avoid the losses

You are just not getting enough voltage off of a single channel to ground. The LED would only be on half the time (not an issue by itself with high frequency), and the positive half is probably not high enough to meet the LED forward voltage requirement.