Lecture1010 12284 Transistor
Lecture1010 12284 Transistor
Introduction
• Beside diodes, the most popular semiconductor devices is transistors. Eg:
Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT)
• Transistors are often said to be the most significant invention of the 20th
Century.
• If cells are the building blocks of life, transistors are the building blocks of
the digital revolution. Without transistors, the technological wonders you
use every day -- cell phones, computers, cars -- would be vastly different,
if they existed at all.
• Transistors are more complex and can be used in many ways
• Most important feature: can amplify signals and as switch
• Amplification can make weak signal strong (make sounds louder and
signal levels greater), in general, provide function called Gain
Who Invented the
• Transistor?
In the mid 1940’s a team of scientists working for Bell Telephone Labs in
Murray Hill, New Jersey, were working to discover a device to replace the
then present vacuum tube technology. Vacuum tubes were the only
technology available at the time to amplify signals or serve as switching
devices in electronics. The problem was that they were expensive,
consumed a lot of power, gave off too much heat, and were unreliable,
causing a great deal of maintenance.
The
•
Transistor
The scientists that were responsible for the 1947 invention of
the transistor were: John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and
William Shockley. Bardeen, with a Ph.D. in mathematics and
physics from Princeton University, was a specialist in the
electron conducting properties of semiconductors. Brattain,
Ph.D., was an expert in the nature of the atomic structure of
solids at their surface level and solid-state physics. Shockley,
Ph.D., was the director of transistor research for Bell Labs.
P N
Ic(mA) IC(mA)
IB(µA) IB(µA)
IE(mA) IE(mA)
N E
The emitter is heavily doped.
NPN Transistor Bias
No current flows.
N C
The C-B junction
is reverse
P B
biased.
N E
NPN Transistor Bias
N C
Current flows.
NPN Transistor Bias
IC
Current flows
everywhere. N C
Although IB is smaller
P B
it controls IE and IC.
IB
Gain is something small N E
controlling something large
IE
(IB is small).
IC = 99 mA
N E
= 9I9Cm = 99
AI
1 BmA
IC = 99 mA
Kirchhoff’s
current C
law:
IB = 1 mA P B
IE = I B + IC
N E
= 1 mA + 99
mA
In a PNP transistor,
holes flow from C
emitter to collector.
IB = 1 mA B
Notice the PNP
bias voltages.
E
IE = 100 mA
NPN Schematic Symbol
Collector
C
Base
BE
Emitter
Memory aid: NPN
means Not Pointing iN.
PNP Schematic Symbol
Collector
C
Base
BE
Emitter
Memory aid: PNP
means Pointing iN Properly.
Recall: NPN and PNP Bias
• Fundamental operation of pnp transistor and npn transistor is similar except for:
– role of electron and hole,
– voltage bias polarity, and
– Current direction
Transistor
configuration
• Transistor configuration –is a connection of transistor to get variety operation.
• 3 types of configuration:
– Common Collector.
– Common Base.
– Common Emitter
Common-Base Configuration
• Base terminal is a common point for input and output.
• Input – EB
• Output – CB
• Not applicable as an amplifier because the relation between input current
gain (IE) and output current gain (IC) is approximately 1
I-V Characteristics of CB configuration
Input Characteristics
turned
(Si) on when
VBE = 0.7V
I-V Characteristic for CE configuration : Output
characteristic
• Output characteristic: output
current (IC) against output
voltage (VCE) for several
input current (IB)
• 3 operating regions:
– Saturation region
– Cut-off region
– Active region
Common-Collector Configuration
▪ The input signal is applied to the base terminal and the output is taken
from the emitter terminal.
• Collector terminal is common to the input and output of the circuit
• Input – BC
• Output – EC
I-V Characteristics of CC configuration
The input characteristics of a common
collector configuration are quite different
from the common base and common
emitter configurations because the input
voltage VBC is largely determined by
VEC level. Here,
VEC = VEB + VBC
VEB = VEC – VBC
The input characteristics of a common-
collector configuration are obtained
between inputs current IB and the input
voltage VCB at constant output voltage VEC.
Keep the output voltage VEC constant at
different levels and vary the input voltage
VBC for different points and record the
IB values for each point. Now using these
values we need to draw a graph between
the parameters of VBC and IB at constant VEC.
I-V Characteristics of CC configuration
Output Characteristics
The operation of the common collector circuit is
same as that of common emitter circuit. The
output characteristics of a common collector
circuit are obtained between the output voltage
VEC and output current IE at constant input
current IB. In the operation of common collector
circuit if the base current is zero then the emitter
current also becomes zero. As a result no current
flows through the transistor
If the base current increases then the transistor
operates in active region and finally reaches to
saturation region. To plot the graph first we keep
the IB at constant value and we will vary the
VEC value for various points, now we need to
record the value of IE for each point. Repeat the
same process for different IB values. Now using
these values we need to plot the graph between
the parameters of IE and VCE at constant values of
IB. The below figure show the output
characteristics of common collector.
I-V Characteristic for CE configuration :
Output characteristic
• Saturation region – in which both junctions are forward-biased and IC increase
linearly with VCE
• Active region – in which the transistor can act as a linear amplifier, where
the BE junction is forward-biased and BC junction is reverse-biased. IC
increases drastically although only small changes of IB.
• Saturation and cut-off regions – areas where the transistor can operate as
a switch