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HW9 Sol

Solution for electrical circuits hw9

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views5 pages

HW9 Sol

Solution for electrical circuits hw9

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이찬형
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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P12.3 The sketch should resemble Figure 12.1a in the book. In normal operation, current flows into the base, into the collector, and out of the emitter. P12.4 Fora BJT, the parameters are defined as: It is assumed that the base-emitter junction is forward biased and that the collector-base junction is reverse biased. P12.7* The emitter current is given by the Shockley equation: ¥, I, Mee |_4 es [on v | | For operation with i, >> I-,.we have on fe | >> 1, and we can write: Moe oe] Solving for vee , we have. le =v.in| 10° Vee =V; In r = 26In| Soar |= 640.51mV Vaz = Vee —Vzg = 0.640 -10.0 = -9.359 - 8.200 _ “= Fa 201 99° i, = ai, =9.95mA £6 49.75 uA B P12.8 Writing a current equation at the collector of Q,, we have: doy +hgy tiga = 1A However, ig, = ig, and icy = fig, , s0 we have Bg, + gy + ig, = 1A gg = 4.9304 uA gp = 4.9504 iA iy Big, = 0.990093 mA fey = fea = fas + ey = 0:99009mA As in the solution to Problem P12.7, we have: #| o0z6in| 0.990 «10° bea Vag, =Vges = Vpn ) 0676V 0.5x10™ P12.22* Following the approach of Example 12.2, we construct the load lines shown, We estimate that Vic... =18.4V.Vieq =15.6V, 0nd Vie, =12V Thus, the voltage gain magnitude is |A| = (18.4 -12)/0.4 = 16 war Timer 0) Tae*5 5 Tenis o oz o ‘06 8 10 0) P12.34 (a) (b) (©) (d) vee (VY) ° 4 e la 1 Vee se IRV VeeEWl2Y Yggu ISLV I, =I, -I, =0.5mA The transistor is in saturation because we have I, 0.2 and I, > 0. Thus, we have I, = AT, = 20 mA, I, = 20.2 mA, and Vie =5 V. This pnp transistor is in the active region because we have Vee <-0.2 and I, > 0. Thus, we have I, = fl, =1mA, I, =1.01 mA, and V,, =-5.6 V. This pnp transistor is in cutoff because both junctions are reverse biased. Thus, we haveL, =I, = I, =0,and Voc =-4V. P12.48* From Equations 12.20 through 12.23, we have: Vv, —V, = pl, = po TRI 1 UR +1R, R Me RR, 0.95 «4.7 kQ = Maximum I, occurs for f= Pax. 4465 0,2, =R,.., = 0.95 x100kO = 95kO, andR, = 1.05 «47 ko = 49.35kQ. With these values, we calculate: R, =32.48kKQ —V, =5.128V Tenax = 0.952 mA Minimum I, occurs for 6 = fin = 5, Re = Renae = 105% 4.7 kQ = 4.935 KO, R, = Rigor = 1.05 x 100 KO = 105 kA, and R, = Ron = 0.9547 k= 44.65k0. With these values, we calculate: R,=3133kKQ Vy =4.475V Lenn = 0.6667 mA P12.54 See Figure 12.26 in the text. P12.55" We use the same approach as in Section 12.7. We can write ig(t) =10°vje(t) Tyg +ig(t) =10 Mya +¥ue (tI? Tq +ig(t) =10°Vizq +210 Veeavye(t)+10°V2(¢) (1) However for the Q-point, we have I. = 10 Vag. Therefore, the first term on each side of Equation (1) can be canceled. Furthermore, the last term on the right hand side of Equation (1) is negligible for small signals Ti.e., vig (t) much less than Vseq at all times]. Thus, Equation (1) becomes ig (€) = 210 VscaVse (t) We have defined Vee (t) ie) and we have. 5x10* n= © 2x10 ecg /10°I ag 5x10" 1581 Yl0°Ezq/100 Iza For I. =2mA, we obtain r. = 35.35kQ..

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