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Bipolar Transistors Chapter 21 Introduction An Overview of Bipolar Transistors Bipolar Transistor Operation Bipolar Transistor Characteristics Summary of Bipolar Transistor Characteristics Bipolar Transistor Amplifiers Other Bipolar Transistor Applications Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Introduction 21.1 Bipolar transistors are one of the main ‘building-blocks’ in electronic systems They are used in both analogue and digital circuits They incorporate two pn junctions and are sometimes known as bipolar junction transistors or BJTs Here will refer to them simply as bipolar transistors Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› An Overview of Bipolar Transistors 21.2 While control in a FET is due to an electric field, control in a bipolar transistor is generally considered to be due to an electric current – current into one terminal determines the current between two others – as with a FET, a bipolar transistor can be used as a ‘control device’ Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Notation – bipolar transistors are 3 terminal devices collector (c) base (b) emitter (e) – the base is the control input – diagram illustrates the notation used for labelling voltages and currents Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Relationship between the collector current and the base current in a bipolar transistor – characteristic is approximately linear – magnitude of collector current is generally many times that of the base current – the device provides current gain Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Construction – two polarities: npn and pnp Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Bipolar Transistor Operation 21.3 We will consider npn transistors – pnp devices are similar but with different polarities of voltage and currents – when using npn transistors collector is normally more positive than the emitter VCE might be a few volts device resembles two back-to-back diodes – but has very different characteristics with the base open-circuit negligible current flows from the collector to the emitter Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Now consider what happens when a positive voltage is applied to the base (with respect to the emitter) – this forward biases the base-emitter junction – the base region is light doped and very thin – because it is likely doped, the current produced is mainly electrons flowing from the emitter to the base – because the base region is thin, most of the electrons entering the base get swept across the base-collector junction into the collector – this produces a collector current that is much larger than the base current – this gives current amplification Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Transistor action Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Bipolar Transistor Characteristics 21.4 Behaviour can be described by the current gain, hfe or by the transconductance, gm of the device Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Transistor configurations – transistors can be used in a number of configurations – most common is as shown – emitter terminal is common to input and output circuits – this is a common-emitter configuration – we will look at the characteristics of the device in this configuration Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Input characteristics – the input takes the form of a forwardbiased pn junction – the input characteristics are therefore similar to those of a semiconductor diode Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Output characteristics – region near to the origin is the saturation region – this is normally avoided in linear circuits – slope of lines represents the output resistance Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Transfer characteristics – can be described by either the current gain or by the transconductance – DC current gain hFE or is given by IC / IB – AC current gain hfe is given by ic / ib – transconductance gm is given approximately by gm 40IC 40 IE siemens Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Equivalent circuits for a bipolar transistor Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Summary of Bipolar Transistor Characteristics 21.5 Bipolar transistors have three terminals: collector, base and emitter The base is the control input Two polarities of device: npn and pnp The collector current is controlled by the base voltage/current IC = hFEIB Behaviour is characterised by the current gain or the transconductance Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Bipolar Transistor Amplifiers 21.6 A simple transistor amplifier – RB is used to ‘bias’ the transistor by injecting an appropriate base current – C is a coupling capacitor and is used to couple the AC signal while preventing external circuits from affecting the bias – this is an AC-coupled amplifier Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› AC-coupled amplifier – VB is set by the conduction voltage of the base-emitter junction and so is about 0.7 V – voltage across RB is thus VCC – 0.7 – this voltage divided by RB gives the base current IB – the collector current is then given by IC = hFEIB – the voltage drop across RC is given by IC RC – the quiescent output voltage is therefore Vo = VCC - IC RC – output is determined by hFE which is very variable Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Negative feedback amplifiers Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Example – see Example 21.2 from course text Determine the quiescent output voltage of this circuit Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Base current is small, so VB VCC R2 10 k 10 2. 7 V R1 R2 27 k 10 k Emitter voltage VE = VB – VBE = 2.7 – 0.7 = 2.0 V Emitter current IE VE 2.0 V 2 mA RE 1 k Since IB is small, collector current IC IE = 2 mA Output voltage = VCC – ICRC = 10 - 2 mA 2.2 k = 5.6 V Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› A common-collector amplifier – – – – unity gain high input resistance low output resistance a very good buffer amplifier Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Other Bipolar Transistor Applications 21.7 A phase splitter Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› A voltage regulator Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› A logical switch Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#› Key Points Bipolar transistors are widely used in both analogue and digital circuits They can be considered as either voltage-controlled or current-controlled devices Their characteristics may be described by their gain or by their transconductance Feedback can be used to overcome problems of variability The majority of circuits use transistors in a common-emitter configuration where the input is applied to the base and the output is taken from the collector Common-collector circuits make good buffer amplifiers Bipolar transistors are used in a wide range of applications Storey: Electrical & Electronic Systems © Pearson Education Limited 2004 OHT 21.‹#›