Title: Nodal analysis
1Lecture 16 Bipolar transistors
Reading transistors Bipolar chapter 6 MOS
chapter 14
2Topics
- Today
- Bipolar transistors
- IV curve
- Making an amplifier
3Electron flow
- So the forward bias on the emitter-base junction
induces the electrons to flow, but most of them
make it across to the collector instead of
stopping in the base and flowing to the base
terminal
Collector
Base
Emitter
4Beta (ß) and alpha (a)
- When the base-emitter junction is forward biased,
and the base-collector junction is reverse
biased, approximately a fixed portion of the
electrons will make it across to the collector
rather than coming from the base contact. The
ratio current from the electrons that make it
across to the total current is alpha ICaIE
Alpha can be close to one, 0.99 is not uncommon. - Since IBICIE? IB(1-a)IE
- we define ß(1-a)
5- Both of these definitions for the bipolar
transistor are only approximately true, but for
most bipolar transistors in the active mode, they
are reasonable approximations.
6Device model
- As long as the base-collector junction is reverse
biased, and the Emitter-base junction is forward
biased, a good model of the NPN transistor is
Collector
Base
Emitter
7Other modes of operation
- Cut-off
- If the Emitter-base junction (the one controlling
the current) is not forward biased, then the
transistor is said to be in cut-off. - A small amount of current will still flow,
usually negligible - Saturation
- If the Base-collector junction sees so much
current flow that it is no longer forward biased,
then the device will no longer behave as
described. - Breakdown
- If a high enough voltage is applied, the
transistor junctions will break down, and a high
current can flow.
8Currents and voltages
- The currents are labeled by the letter for the
terminal they come into
The voltages are labeled with a double subscript,
with the subscripts referring to the two
terminals the voltage difference is taken
between Example, the voltage difference between
the collector and emitter leads is called VCE
The voltage between the base and the emitter is
called VBE
IC
IB
IE
9IV curve
- Since the transistor is a three terminal device
is a three terminal device, you might think that
6 variables would be important - Vbc the voltage between the base and the
collector - Vbe the voltage between the base and the
emitter. - Vce- The voltage between the collector and the
emitter. - Ib- the current into the base.
- Ic- the current into the collector.
- Ie- the current out of the emitter.
- But the transistor has no net charge, so IBICIE
- And of course if you know any two of the voltages
you can calculate the third. We generally use
VBE and VCE
10Transistor circuit configurations
- Typically we will want to use the transistor as a
device which has an input and an output. Since
one of the terminals must be shared, we call that
a common terminal - The voltages with respect to the common terminal
are then used to describe the operation of the
transistors - There are three types of connections
- Common emitter,
- Common collector,
- Common base
11Common Emitter configuration
R
The voltages are labeled with a double subscript,
with the subscripts referring to the two
terminals the voltage difference is taken
between Example, the voltage difference between
the collector and emitter leads is called VCE
The voltage between the base and the emitter is
called VBE
IC
IB
Vout -
Vin -
IE
12IV curve for common emitter
- To show the IV curve for a NPN transistor in a
common emitter configuration, we plot the voltage
from the collector to the emitter Vce vs the
current from the emitter Ic - The base current is shown by setting several
values and then plotting a curve for each of them
(called steps)
Ic
Breakdown
Forward Active
Vce
Saturation
13The NPN bipolar as a current amplifier
- The bipolar transistor is naturally a current
amplifier, because the voltage VBE is pretty much
clamped to .7 volts in the active mode of
operation. - As VBE moves slightly above 0.7 volts, the
current gets very large - If VBE is slightly below 0.7 volts, the current
goes to zero - Rather than trying to set VBE to a very precise
value, we can just put in a current IB instead. - The current from the collector is ICßIB, so we
amplify the input current by the factor ß
14The bipolar transistor as a voltage amplifier
- We can convert a voltage into a current by using
a resistor, and we can also convert a current
into a voltage, so we can make a voltage
amplifier from a NPN transistor
RC
IC
IB
Vout -
Vin -
RB
IE
15Voltage amplification
- The current into the base IB is
- And the current into the collector is
- And if we have a 5 volt supply rail, the output
voltage is
16Amplifiers
- Notice that when the input voltage goes up, the
output voltage goes down (the voltage gain is
negative - This is a very common feature of single
transistor amplifiers - The input is referenced to the 0.7 volts of the
turn on for the base-emitter diode, and must be
higher than 0.7 volts. (Why?) - The output is offset from the power supply
voltage, and can not go higher than the power
supply voltage. (Why?) - Since the output is larger than the input, where
does the power come from?
17Biasing a transistor
- Setting up a transistor circuit so that it will
amplify a voltage without it needing have a
specific offset voltage, and producing an output
referenced to a desired point instead of whatever
you get in terms of an offset from the power
supply, is called biasing a transistor. We will
study biasing in chapter 8.
18The bipolar transistor in a logic device
- Bipolar devices have also been used to make logic
circuits an example of a NOR gate
Output
A
B
If A is below 0.7 volts, and B is also below 0.7
volts, then the output is near 5 volts if either
A or B is high, then the output is pulled down