The Common-Collector Amplifier Basic Circuit: + 2 1 1 2 BB 1 2 EE E CC + CC C BE BB EE C BB BE C EE
The Common-Collector Amplifier Basic Circuit: + 2 1 1 2 BB 1 2 EE E CC + CC C BE BB EE C BB BE C EE
Basic Circuit
Fig. 1 shows the circuit diagram of a single stage common-collector amplifier. The object is
to solve for the small-signal voltage gain, input resistance, and output resistance.
DC Solution
(a) Replace the capacitors with open circuits. Look out of the 3 BJT terminals and make
Thévenin equivalent circuits as shown in Fig. 2.
V + R2 + V − R1
VBB = RBB = R1 kR2
R1 + R2
VEE = V − REE = RE VCC = V + RCC = RC
(b) Make an “educated guess” for VBE . Write the loop equation between the VBB and
the VEE nodes.
IC IC
VBB − VEE = IB RBB + VBE + IE REE = RBB + VBE + REE
β α
(c) Solve the loop equation for the currents.
VBB − VEE − VBE
IC = αIE = βIB =
RBB /β + REE /α
(d) Verify that VCB > 0 for the active mode.
VCB = VC − VB = (VCC − IC RCC ) − (VBB − IB RBB ) = VCC − VBB − IC (RCC − RBB /β)
1
Figure 2: Bias circuit.
Small-Signal or AC Solutions
(a) Redraw the circuit with V + = V − = 0 and all capacitors replaced with short circuits as
shown in Fig. 3.
2
Figure 4: Signal circuit with Thévenin base circuit.
Exact Solution
(a) Replace the BJT in Fig. 4 with the Thévenin base emitter circuits as shown in Fig. 5.
Solve for ve(oc) .
r0 + Rtc / (1 + β)
ve(oc) = vtb 0 Rtc = 0
re + r0 + Rtc / (1 + β)
Note that the Thévenin resistance Rtc looking out of the collector is zero in the original
circuit. The exact solution gives the correct answer even if Rtc 6= 0.
3
(e) Solve for rout .
rout = rie kRE
(f) Special case for r0 = ∞.
4
Alternate Solutions
These solutions are exact because the Thévenin resistance Rtc looking out of the collector is
zero. If Rtc 6= 0, replace r0 with an open circuit in all formulas, i.e. let r0 = ∞ In this case,
the solutions are no longer exact, they are approximate.
Example 2 Use the simplified T-model solutions to calculate the values of Av , rin , and rout
for Example 1.
5
π Model Solution
(a) After making the Thévenin equivalent circuits looking out of the base and emitter, replace
the BJT with the π model as shown in Fig. 7.
6
rin = R1 kR2 krib
(f) Solve for rout .First, solve for the open-circuit output voltage. This is the output
voltage with RL = ∞.
r0 kRE
vo(oc) = vtb
Rtb + rx + rπ
+ r0 kRE
1+β
Next, solve for the short-circuit output current. This is the output current with RL = 0.
The output current is given by
vo vtb r0 kRE kRL vtb r0 kRE
io = = =
RL Rtb + rx + rπ RL Rtb + rx + rπ R + r0 kRE
+ r0 kRE kRL + r0 kRE kRL L
1+β 1+β
Now, let RL = 0 to obtain
vtb
io(sc) =
Rtb + rx + rπ
1+β
The output resistance is given by
µ ¶
vo(oc) r0 kRE Rtb + rx + rπ Rtb + rx + rπ
rout = = = kr0 kRE
io(sc) Rtb + rx + rπ 1+β 1+β
+ r0 kRE
1+β
Note this is simply re0 kr0 kRE , an answer that is obvious using the simplified T model.
Example 3 Use the π-model solutions to calculate the values of Av , rin , and rout for Example
1.
T Model Solution
(a) After making the Thévenin equivalent circuits looking out of the base and emitter, replace
the BJT with the T model as shown in Fig. 8.
(b) Solve for i0e .
i0e
vtb = ib (Rtb + rx ) + i0e (re + r0 kRE kRL ) = (Rtb + rx ) + i0e (re + r0 kRE kRL )
1+β
vtb
=⇒ i0e =
Rtb + rx
+ re + r0 kRE kRL
β
(c) Solve for vo .
vtb
vo = i0e r0 kRE kRL = r0 kRE kRL
Rtb + rx
+ re + r0 kRE kRL
β
R1 kR2 r0 kRE kRL
= vs
Rs + R1 kR2 Rtb + rx
+ re + r0 kRE kRL
β
7
Figure 8: T model circuit.
8
This is the same answer obtained from the simplified T model.
Example 4 Use the T-model solutions to calculate the values of Av , rin , and rout for Ex-
ample 1.