Difference between revisions of "TF EIM Chapt6"

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The point Q_0 in the  above curve represents a "Quiescent" point where the best amplification occurs because it is in the middle of the operating point.   
 
The point Q_0 in the  above curve represents a "Quiescent" point where the best amplification occurs because it is in the middle of the operating point.   
  
Q_0 is the cutoff point where there is no output:ie; the base current is zero.
+
If you want to use the transistor for an analog signal (microphone-speaker) then you will want to operate the circuit near Q_0 and have a shallow load line.
  
Q_S is the point where the amplifier is saturating.  he transistor can;t supply the needed drive current so the output is truncated.
+
Q_0 is the cutoff point where there is no output:ie; the base current is zero; the transistor has infinite resistance
 +
 
 +
Q_S is the point where the amplifier is saturating.  The transistor is supplying its max current a signal going beyond will essentially be clipped.  The transistor has an effective resistance of zero at this point.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
If you want to make a digital switch then you want the load line as steep as possible so the circuit changes from Q_0 (off) to Q_S(on)  as fast as possible.
  
 
==Temperature Dependence==
 
==Temperature Dependence==

Revision as of 01:47, 16 March 2011

Load Line

The load line represents the bias conditions in which the [math]I_C -vs V_{CE}[/math] dependence is linear;(i.e.: a constance Resistance). Setting up a circuit which changes the transistor bias along the load line means that the transistor is behaving like a resistor.


Consider the collector-Emitter side of the transistor below.

TF EIM LoadLineCircuit1.gif


Kirchoff's loops theorem is

[math]V_{CC} - I_CR_C -V_{CE} = 0[/math]

[math]\Rightarrow[/math]

[math]I_C = \frac{V_{CC}}{R_C} - \frac{1}{R_C} V_{CE}[/math]

A graph of [math]I_C -vs- V_{CE}[/math] is a line with a slope of[math] - \frac{1}{R_C}[/math] and a y-intercept of [math]\frac{V_{CC}}{R_C}[/math].

If [math]I_C=0[/math] then [math]V_{CE} = V_{CC}[/math].

The point Q_0 in the above curve represents a "Quiescent" point where the best amplification occurs because it is in the middle of the operating point.

If you want to use the transistor for an analog signal (microphone-speaker) then you will want to operate the circuit near Q_0 and have a shallow load line.

Q_0 is the cutoff point where there is no output:ie; the base current is zero; the transistor has infinite resistance

Q_S is the point where the amplifier is saturating. The transistor is supplying its max current a signal going beyond will essentially be clipped. The transistor has an effective resistance of zero at this point.


If you want to make a digital switch then you want the load line as steep as possible so the circuit changes from Q_0 (off) to Q_S(on) as fast as possible.

Temperature Dependence

As the temperature increases the impurity atoms tend to diffuse through the semiconductor fro high concentration regions to low concentration regions.

This diffusion changes the[math] I_C -vs- V_{CE}[/math] curve near the saturation region because the diode biasing voltages change.


You don't want the temperature change of the transistor to change the bias conditions of the transistor.

Bipolar Transistor Amplifier

TF EIM Lab14a.png


Consider the above circuit.

Observations

1.) Notice the input goes through a high pass filter with a break point of[math] \frac{1}{R_1 C_1}[/math].

2.) The output also goes through a high pass filter with a break point of[math] \frac{1}{R_l C_2}[/math].

3.) Kirchoff voltage rule

[math]V_{CC} -I_C R_C - V_{CE} - I_E R_E = 0[/math]
[math]V_{CC} - V_{CE} -I_C (R_C + R_E) = 0[/math] [math]I_C \approx I_E[/math]
[math]\Rightarrow I_C =\frac{ V_{CC} - V_{CE}}{R_C + R_E }[/math]

4.) Kirchoff law

[math]V_{CC} -(I_B + I_D) R_2 - V_{EB} - I_E R_E = 0[/math]

5.) INput resistance

[math]\frac{1}{R_{in}} = \frac{1}{X_B} + \frac{1}{R_1} + \frac{1}{R_2}[/math]

6.)

[math]V_B = \frac{R_1}{R_1+R_2} V_{CC}[/math]

Forest_Electronic_Instrumentation_and_Measurement