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Electronics - lectures for Mechanical Engineering part 3 Dr. Bogusław Boratyński Faculty of Microsystems Electronics and Photonics, Wroclaw University of Technology, 2013 From the course syllabus Basic literature & figure sources: G. Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, Addison-Wesley Publ., B.G. Streetman, Solid State Electronic Devices, Prentice-Hall, D. Bell, Fundamentals of Electric Circuits, Oxford Univ. Press, T. Mouthaan, Semiconductor Devices Explained, John Willey&Sons Additional literature: W. Marciniak, Przyrządy półprzewodnikowe i układy scalone, WNT, A. Świt, J. Pułtorak, Przyrządy półprzewodnikowe, WNT, B.G. Streetman, Przyrządy półprzewodnikowe, WNT Semiconductor devices Chapter 3 Electronic devices. 3.2 Bipolar transistors and applications: Amplifiers, Switches. Transistor symbols and structure. The amplifier and the switch. Operation principle and biasing. DC I-V characteristics for CE and CB configurations Bias - operating point. The load line. Small signal models and parameters. Transistor amplifier circuit and analysis. Transistor switch. Bipolar transistor symbols and construction Three regions, three terminals (leads) Two p-n junctions E – the most highly doped region (p+ or n+) B – the thinnest region Source: G. Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill The p-n diode and n-p-n transistor A bipolar transistor – two back to back connected p-n junctions A p-n diode + another p-n junction… N- type region (donor dopants) npn transistor in monolithic integrated circuit design C - collector terminal in a discrete transistor Source: R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, Addison-Wesley Publishing Comp. The amplifier circuit principles and the gain. Transistor - two-port device - internal transistor gain E - common terminal (input & output) CE - Common Emmiter circuit Independent source + Amplifier gain VS2 IS1 Input signal Output signal Load Equvalent transistor model US symbols Dependent (controlled) sources European symbols V + I VCVS1 CCCS2 - - internal transistor voltage gain - internal transistor current gain Source: R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, Addison-Wesley Publishing Comp. Transistor as a switch or a driver Transistor - current or voltage activated switch OFF example: LED driver ON High –low voltage signal Source: R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, Addison-Wesley Publishing Comp. ON- OFF state Source: G . Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill Junction bias – operation modes n-p-n p-n-p VCE Active operation (Amplifier) junction bias: E-B forward , C-B reverse Saturation (switch ON) junction bias: E-B forward , C-B forward Cut-off (switch OFF) junction bias: E-B reverse , C-B reverse Active operation constant current gain for signal amplification Current relations: IC + IE + IB =0 small IB, large IC IE Current gain: Common Base current gain Common Emmiter current gain Source: G . Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill Junction bias – operation modes Active operation junction bias: E-B forward , B-C reverse p-n-p Hole diffusion current (electrons in npn) through the Base width (WB) from Emitter to Collector responsible for the gain 1 0.995 electrons IC IE holes Recombination in the Base loss of carriers, gain decrease Flow of electrons and holes under proper junction bias for active operation. Terminal currents Carrier currents Drift & Diffusion currents circuit analysis device analysis physical phenomena Source: G . Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill Transistor active bias – terminal bias p-n-p Active operation junction bias: E-B forward , C-B reverse n-p-n CB configuration gain: CE configuration gain: IC + IE + IB =0 1 = /(1-) 0.995 = 0.995/(1-0.995) = 0.995/0.005 200 »1 p-n-p n-p-n The CE transistor I-V characteristics The output current-voltage dependence of the bipolar transistor in Common Emitter configuration: IC–UCE for IB = const. IB =const. – the base current is a parameter of the family of I-V characteristics In the active region of transistor operation the gain is almost constant. IB= 0 P=U I or I=P/U Max. dissipated power hiperbole IC = IB In the saturation region this is not true. In cut-off region IC = ICE0 for IB = 0 Bipolar transistor - limits of dc bias Voltage and current limits of a bipolar transistor operation: - Voltage limit - CB junction breakdown, base region punch-through - Current limit - rated current - thermal effects - Power limit - dissipated power P = IU - thermal effects Q-point Common emitter – output voltage breakdown BVCBO Common base – output voltage breakdown BVCEO BVCBO >> BVCEO typically: 50V – 100V (800V) Source: B.C.Streetman Solid State Electronic Devices, Prentice Hall. Transistor parameters - datasheet Case and pins Pad layout on PCB Symbols semiconductor: A… - Ge B… - Si C… - GaAs, GaN BC… - Si, low freq., low power Transistor type: BC – low. freq., low power BD - low freq., power BF – radio freq., low power BL - radio freq., power BS – switching BU – high voltage US code: 2Nxxxx Transistor parameters - datasheet Parametry dopuszczalne (elektryczne i cieplne) important: for common base. for common emmiter Transistor parameters - datasheet BD… - low freq., power Si transistor with radiator attached Finding transistor operating point Recall a DC circuit with a diode (nonlinear element) The load line in a diode circuit Finding the operating point - Qpoint from KVL: VT= RT iD + vD and the load line equation is: iD = -(1/ RT) vD + VT /RT Operating point is; iD = 21mA , vD = 1.0 V Source: G. Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill The CE transistor I-V characteristics and Q-point Basic amplifier circuit The output current-voltage dependence of the bipolar transistor in Common Emitter configuration: IC–UCE for IB = const. + the load line UCC = RL IC + UCE (from KVL) IC = + UCE /RL – UCC /RL UCC /RL _ + IC II I Q-point =U =UBE BE UCC Q-point: IC = 48mA, UCE =4V, IB = 0.3mA (quiescent point, operating point, DC bias point) IB =UCE The CE transistor I-V characteristics The input current-voltage dependence of the bipolar transistor in Common Emitter configuration: UBE - IB for UCE = const. (parameter) Input voltage signal vBE Input current signal iB The p-n junction (EB jn.) forward I-V characteristic The CE transistor I-V characteristics and ac signals The output current-voltage characteristics and ac signal amplification iC , iB , vCE – ac signals iB iC Output current ac signal iC = iB Output voltage ac signal vCE Source: G. Rizzoni, Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering, McGraw-Hill The CE transistor I-V characteristics The transfer (current-current) dependence of the bipolar transistor in Common Emitter configuration: IC–IB for UCE = const. (parameter) The slope denotes the current gain The Gummel plot (current gain ) Source: R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, Addison-Wesley Publishing Comp. The output characteristics Comparision of common emitter (CE) and common base (CB) output characteristics of the bipolar transistor from the previous considerations: if » 1 IE IC IE - VBE IE - VBE VCE VCB VCE VCE = VCB + VBE (KVL) The dc (large signal) model of a bipolar transistor The current-voltage characteristics are derived based on the Ebers-Moll equivalent model of a bipolar transistor p n p F Active bias current denotes current gain at active transistor bias R denotes current gain at reverse transistor bias: E-B jn. reverse C-B jn. forward R « F Source: R.F. Pierret, Semiconductor Device Fundamentals, Addison-Wesley Publishing Comp. The ac small signal model of a bipolar transistor Small signal equivalent model [ hij ] - hybrid parameters It is valid for low frequencies, f 100kHz (no capacitances included) h11e h21e For Common Emitter [ hije ]: ac small signals: I1 = iB = ΔIB U1 = uBE = ΔUBE I2 = iC = ΔIC U2 = uCE =ΔUCE dU BE U BE Rinput dI B I B dI C I C dI B I B h22e h12e Where a small signal means: uBE = ΔUBE = UM sin ωt amplitude UM 25mV current gain dI C I C 1 dU CE U CE Routput dU BE U BE dU CE U CE The ac small signal model of a bipolar transistor Basic amplifier circuit Small signal parameters – graphical analysis Q-point Q-point h11e dU BE U BE Rinput dI B I B h22e dI C I C 1 dU CE U CE Routput Small signal parameters from the datasheet BC846 hij parameters BC846 ( CE configuration) Temperature dependence of hFE =h21E = β IC – bias current (Q-point) The CE transistor amplifier small signal model Circuit diagram of a Common Emitter (CE) amplifier Equivalent small signal model of the CE amplifier for low frequencies (LF) Transistor model Procedure: 1. Transistor is substituted by its small signal equivalent model. 2. Power supply, due to its large internal capacitance, for ac signals is shorted to the ground. The CE transistor amplifier small signal model Voltage gain of Common Emitter (CE) amplifier : Equivalent small signal model of a CE amplifier for LF U2 U1 U I1 I b 1 h11e AV U 2 h21e I b RL AV h21e RL h11e if 1 / h22e RL AV Routput AV Routput General case: AV h21 Routput Rinput since for CE amplifier »1 Rinput Rinput Routput Rinput for CB amplifier 1 then Av >>1 in any case