Vactrol

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The vactrol, resistive opto-isolator or photoresistive opto-isolator in its simplest form, the analogue optoisolator consists of a LED and a light-dependent resistor (LDR) in the same package: light output from the LED varies as the current passing through it; the light strikes the LDR, varying its resistance in turn; in effect this gives a current-controlled resistor.

An early manufacturer of these devices was Vactec Inc, who used the trademark Vactrol, and this has since largely become genericized to cover all such available devices, whoever might make them. Through acquisitions etc., Vactec became part of Perkin Elmer, and recently it appears the Vactrol trademark has passed to a company called 'Excelitas'.

There are reports of success using the Fairchild H11FxM family. These devices use a silicon photo-detector (rather than an LDR), which behaves like a FET, and so they don't suffer from the lag in response that LDR-based devices have, i.e. they can be modulated at audio rates.

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