This  circuit allows a 240V mains appliance to be  controlled remotely via  low-voltage cabling and a pushbutton switch. The  mains appliance (in  this case, a light bulb) is switched with a  suitably-rated relay. All  of the electronics is housed in an ABS box  located in proximity to the  appliance. The pushbutton switch and  plugpack are located remotely and  can be wired up with 3-core alarm  cable or similar. Cable lengths of  20m or more are feasible with this  arrangement. When the switch (S1) is  pressed, the input (pin 8) of IC1c  is briefly pulled low via the 10mF  capacitor, which is initially  discharged.
Low-Voltage Remote Mains Switch Circuit diagram:
Low-Voltage Remote Mains Switch Circuit Diagram
The  output (pin 10) immediately goes high  and this is inverted and fed back  to the second input (pin 9) via  another gate in the quad NAND package  (IC1d). In conjunction with the  1MW resistor and 470nF capacitor, IC1d  eliminates the effects of  contact "bounce" by ensuring that IC1c’s  output remains high for a  predetermined period. The output from IC1c  drives the clock input of a  4013 D-type flip-flop (IC2). The flipflop is  wired for a "toggle"  function by virtue of the Q-bar connection back to  the D input. A 2.2MW  resistor and 100nF capacitor improve circuit noise  immunity. Each time  the switch is pressed, the flipflop output (pin 13)  toggles, switching  the transistor (Q1) and relay on or off. Note that  all mains wiring  must be properly installed and completely insulated so  that there is no  possibility of it contacting the low-voltage side of  the circuit.