Topic 4: Bipolar Junction Transistors
Topic 4: Bipolar Junction Transistors
Topic 4: Bipolar Junction Transistors
1
Introduction to BJT
a three-terminal component – Emitter, Collector and Base.
3
Power Transistor Water Analogy
4
Transistor Currents
• IE, IC and IB – emitter, collector and base
currents.
IE > IC >> IB
(mA) (A)
IE IC
= 200
7
Example:
Solution:
IC
IB
IC(
120
)(
50
A)
IC = 6 mA
8
Example
Determine the values of collector current for the values of the
base current shown below.
9
Solution
The base current has an initial value of 20 A. The beta rating
of the component is 300. The initial value of the collector
current is found as
IC I
B 300 20 A 6 mA
10
Transistor Voltages
14
Transistor Operation
Base-emitter Collector-base Operating BJT
junction junction region Characteristics
*Breakdown 15
Zero Bias
• no biasing potential applied.
16
Cutoff
• both transistor junctions are
reverse biased.
18
Saturation
• the opposite of cutoff.
19
Saturation
20
Saturation
22
Transistor Currents and Voltages
• The transistor is a current-controlled device.
• In many applications, the base current is varied to produce
variations in IC and IE
i.e. a small change in IB results in a large change in the other
terminal currents.
23
Example
Determine the values of collector
current for the values of the base Solution
current shown below. The initial value of the
collector current
IC IB 30020 A
mA
When IB increases to 50
A, the collector current
is
I
C
IB
300
50
A
mA
IB = 30 A,
IC = 9 mA,
24
Transistor Currents and Voltages
The Relationship Among IE, IC and IB
IE = IB + IC
25
Transistor Currents and Voltages
• IB = 20 A, IC = 6 mA
IE = 6mA + 20 A
= 6.02 mA
IC
• IB = 50 A, IC = 15 mA
IE = 15.05 mA
26
Transistor Currents & Voltages
• The BE junction is forward biased,
VBE ≈ 0.7 V.
• Emitter is at ground. The voltage across
RB is
VR(B) = VBB − VBE --(1)
• Also, from Ohm’s Law,
VR(B) = IBRB --(2)
• Let (1) = (2)
IBRB = VBB − VBE
• Solving for IB:
V V
IB BB BE
R B 27
Transistor Currents & Voltages
• The voltage at the collector with respect
to grounded emitter is
VCE = VCC – VR(C)
• As the potential drop across RC is
VR(C) = ICRC
The voltage at the collector
VCE = VCC − ICRC
where IC = DCIB.
RC
100 W
RB
10 kW
VCC
10 V
VBB
5V
29
Solution
• Known VBE = 0.7 V (forward biased),
IB = (VBB - VBE) / RB = 430 A
• The collector is at higher potential than the base (VCB > 0 VC >
VB), the collector-base junction is reverse-biased.
30
Current gain, DC Beta
• The dc beta (DC) rating – ratio of dc collector current to dc
base current. IC
DC
IB
• It is a ratio of current values, thus it has no unit of measure.
31
DC Beta
32
Example
33
Example
Determine the values of IC and IE for the circuit shown.
Solution
IB = 125 A
IC = IB
IC = (200)(125 A)
IC = 25 mA
IE is found as
IE = IC + IB
IE = 25.125 mA
34
Example
Determine the values of IC and IB for the circuit shown.
Solution
IB can be determine from
.6
I
IB E 74 A
1
Now, IC can be found as
IC = IE − IB= 14.9 mA
or
IC = IB = 14.9 mA
35
Example
Determine the values of IB and IE for the circuit shown.
Solution
…
38
Example
Determine the value of alpha for the transistor shown.
Then, determine the value of IC using both the alpha and the
beta ratings of the transistor.
Solution:
0.9967
1
IC = IE = 29.9 mA
IC = IB = 30.0 mA
39
Maximum Current Ratings
• Most transistor spec sheets list maximum collector current
ratings for both saturation and cutoff.
Solution:
42
43
Transistor Voltage Ratings
• It indicates the maximum amount of reverse bias that can be
applied to the collector-base junction (reverse biased for active
region operation) without damaging the transistor.
• The value of VCB is equal to the difference between the other two
voltages: 39.25 V. If this voltage exceeds the VCB rating of the
transistor, the component will probable be destroyed. 44
Transistor Voltage Ratings
• Every transistor has three breakdown voltage ratings.
• These ratings indicate the maximum reverse voltages that
the transistor can withstand.
• For the 2N3904, these voltage ratings are as follows:
Rating Value (Vdc)
VCBO 60
VCEO 40
VEBO 6
45
Transistor Characteristic Curves
• The three curves are
(i) The collector curves,
(ii) The base curves and
(iii)The beta curves.
46
Collector Curves
• The collector characteristics
curve illustrates the relationship
among IC, IB and VCE.
48
Saturation Region
49
Example
Determine whether or not the transistor in the circuit
below is in saturation. Assume VCE(sat) = 0.2 V.
RC
1kW
gain = VCC
50 10V
RB
VBB 10kW
3V
50
Solution
First determine IC(sat):
IC(sat) = (VCC – VCE(sat)) / RC
IC(sat) = (10 V – 0.2V) / 1kW
= 9.8 mA
• This shows that with the specified DC, this base current is
capable of producing an IC greater than IC(sat).
• Thus, the transistor is saturated, and the collector current value
of 11.5 mA is never reached. The collector current remains at its
saturation value.
51
Active Region
Let VCC = constant,
• IC increases with IB
• VCE decreases Until it reaches VCE(sat)
somewhere below VK and it is usually
only a few tenths of a volt for a silicon
diode.
• IC cannot increase further
(IC = DCIB is no longer valid).
• IC increases dramatically
54
Cutoff
• There is no current flowing in
the BE junction as VB = VE = 0. CB junction
Hence, IB = IE = 0. reverse - biased RC
• The CB junction is reverse
IB = 0
biased and hence, IC = 0.
BE junction VCC
reverse - biased
• The two junctions are reverse-
biased and ideally, no current
should flow through the BE and
CB junctions.
55
Cutoff
RC
VB<0
VC>0
VCC
RB VE =0
VBB
58
Notations
• Amplifier circuits have both dc and ac quantities for current,
voltage and resistance.
• Italic capital letters are used for both dc and ac currents (I) and
voltages (V). Lowercase i and v for ac current and voltage are
reserved for instantaneous values.
RB RC
r’e
Vin VCC
Vc
Vb
VBB
60
Transistor as an Amplifier
V
C
Vin
VBB VCC
1.0k Solution
RB
The voltage gain is
RC
Vin
VCC A' v =
Vout
re
100 mV 1.0kW
VBB A = 20
50Wv
VCE(cutoff) = VCC
64
Transistor as a Switch
• In part (b), the transistor is in the saturation region (base emitter and
base collector junctions are forward-biased) and the base current is
made large enough to cause the collector current to reach its
saturation value.
• There is a short between collector and emitter. Actually, a voltage
drop of up to a few tenths of a volt normally occurs, which is
saturation voltage, VCE(sat).
• The maximum collector current,
V
V
CC CE(sat
)
IC
(sat
)
RC
• The minimum value of base current
needed to produce saturation is
• IC(sat
)
I B(min)
DC 65
A Simple Application of a Transistor
Switch
• The transistor is used as a switch to VCC
turn the LED on and off.
• A square wave with a period of 2 s is
applied to the input.
RC
ON ON
IC(sat) =
VV 9
V0
.3
V
CCCE(sat)
32
.2
mA
R
C W
270
IB(min) =
I 32.
2mA
C(sat)
644
A
DC 50 67
To ensure saturation, use twice the value of IB(min)
which gives 1.29 mA.
From the circuit,
IB = V R V V V 0.7
V
B
in BE
in
R
B R
B 3
.
3kW
Rearrange the expression above to obtain the
voltage amplitude of the square wave input Vin.
Vin − 0.7 V = 2IB(min)RB = (1.29 mA)(3.3 kW)
Vin = 4.96 V
68
Example
For the circuit shown,
VCC
What is VCE when VIN = 0 V? +10 V RC
1.0kW
Sol: When VIN = 0 V, the transistor
is in cutoff (it acts like an open VIN
switch) and
VCE = VCC = 10 V RB
69
VCC
+10 V RC
Example 1.0kW
VIN
I
B
I
C
(min)
( ) 10
sat
mA
200
50
A
DC
V 4
.
3V
W
R
B
R
B
(max) 86k
IB 50
A
(min) 71
Chapter 2
BJT – DC Biasing Circuits
DC Load Line
Q-point
Base Bias, Emitter Bias, Voltage Divider
Bias, and Collector Feedback Bias
72
Introduction
74
DC Operating Point
• If an amplifier is not properly biased, it will go either into cutoff
or saturation and the amplified signal will be distorted – nonlinear
amplifier.
• A nonlinear amplifier does not preserve its input/output waveform.
• As VBB is adjusted up or
down, the dc operating point
of the transistor moves along
a sloping straight line, called
the dc load line.
76
The DC Load Line
• The dc load line is a graph that represents all the possible
combinations of IC and VCE for a given amplifier.
• The dc load line represents all the IC-VCE combinations for
the circuit.
77
The DC Load Line
• The IC(sat) point represents the ideal value of saturation
current for the circuit.
• Consider a saturated transistor as being short-circuited from
emitter to collector, then VCE is zero, thus
VCC = ICRC (saturation)
• Rearranging the expression for IC, we get
• Recall:
VCC
IC(sat)
RC
78
The DC Load Line
• When the transistor is in cutoff, it looks like an open circuit
from emitter to collector. Collector current, IC = 0
VCE(off) = VCC
• These equations are used to plot the end points of the dc load
line.
Recall:
79
Example
Plot the dc load line for the circuit shown.
Solution
From the circuit values shown,
VCE(off) = VCC = 12 V
and
V
CC12
I 6mA
W
C(
sat
)
R
C 2
k
81
Solution
From the circuit values
shown,
VCE(off) = VCC = 10 V
and
V
IC(sat
) CC
RC
For IC = 5 mA,
VCE = = 5V
83
The Q-Point
• When a transistor does not have an input signal, its output rests
at specific dc values of IC and VCE. i.e. the Q-point on the dc
load line.
84
The Q-Point
(Linear Amp)
• For linear operation of an
amplifier, it is desirable to have
the Q-point centered on the load
line.
• VCE is half the value of VCC,
and IC is half the value of IC(sat).
I
CQ
DCI
BQ
(100
)(
300
A)
30mA
V
V
CEQ
I
CC R
CQ
C10
V
(30
mA
)( W
)
2203.4
V
Q-point values
• The collector current varies 10 mA above and below its Q-
point value of 30 mA.
I
CI
DC
b(
100
)(
200
A
)20
mA
I
CI
DC
b(
100
)(
400
A
)40
mA
• The collector-to-emitter voltage varies 2.2 V above and below
its Q-point value of 3.4 V.
V
V
CE
CCI
CR
C
10
V(
20
mAW
)(
220
)5
.6
V
V
V
CE
CCI
CR
C
10
V(
40
mAW
)(
220
)1
.2
V
88
Point A on the load line corresponds to the positive peak of the
sinusoidal input voltage while point B corresponds to the
negative peak as shown. 89
• When the Q-point is above center of the dc load line, the input
may cause the transistor to saturate. When this happens, part of
the output sine wave is clipped off.
• If the Q-point is below midpoint on the load line, the input may
cause the transistor to go into cutoff. This can also cause a
90
portion of the output sine wave to be clipped.
IBQ
ICQ
VCEQ
Transistor is driven into saturation and cutoff because the input
signal is too large. 91
Example
Determine the Q-point for the circuit below and
find the maximum peak value of base current for
linear operation. Assume DC= 200.
92
Solution
The Q-point is defined
by ICQ and VCEQ.
IBQ = VBB0.7V
RB
= 198 μA
95
Base Bias – circuit analysis
• The primary goal of biasing circuit analysis is to determine the Q-
point values (IC, VCE) to determine whether the circuit is midpoint
biased.
Step 1:
Determining the base current, IB (Ohm’s law)
VBB
IB
RB
The last two equations give the Q-point values of IC and VCE.
97
Example
(a) Determine the Q-point
values of IC and VCE for the
circuit shown below.
R
8
V
BE0
.
7
W
V
360
k
20
.
28A
B
Next, IC is found as
IC h I
FE
B
2.
028mA
99
Solution
(b) The end points of the dc load line are found as
IC(sat) = VCC 8 V
4mA
and RC 2
k W
VCE(off) = VCC = 8 V
100
Solution
101
Base Bias – Q-point Shift
• Base bias circuits are easy to build and analyze but they are
extremely susceptible to a problem called Q-point shift (change
in the Q-point values).
• From circuit analysis performed earlier :
VCE = VCC − ICRC
IC hFEIB
(1) VCE will change if IC changes.
(2) IC is dependent on either IB or hFE changes.
104
Solution
• This is the same circuit as in the previous example.
• At T = 25 oC, hFE = 100 (IB = 20.28 A):
IC = 2.028 mA and VCE = 3.94 V
R
V 2
V
B CC
R 1 R 2
108
Circuit Operation
• If only one value of hFE is listed, it can be used in any
circuit analysis.
h
FE
( )
ave hFE
h
(min)
FE
(max)
109
Example
Determine the value of ICQ and VCEQ for the circuit
shown below.
Solution
The base voltage is determined from
the voltage divider
R
VB 2
V CC 2
.07V
R 1 R2
VE is found as
VE = VB − 0.7 V = = 1.37 V
1
.
25
1 51
mA
24
.
5 A
FE
and I2 =
V
B 2
.07
440
A
R
2 4
.7W
k
The input resistance of the transistor is the gain βDC times the emitter
resistance RE. 112
Example
Determine the dc input resistance looking in at the base
of the transistor in the circuit shown in previous slide
if RE = 1.0 kW and DC = 125.
Solution
RIN(base) = βDC RE
RIN(base) = (125)(1.0 kW) = 125 kW
113
Analysis of a Voltage-Divider Bias
Circuit
When the base current, IB is NOT negligible (??), then the base
input resistance, RIN(base) must be considered in the determination
of the value of base voltage.
Note that the RIN(base) is parallel to the resistor R2 of the voltage-
divider.
114
Analysis of a Voltage-Divider Bias
Circuit
• The total resistance from base to ground is
R2 || RIN(base) = R2 || DCRE
and it is in series with resistor R1. Applying the voltage
divider formula yields:
R2
|| R
DCE
V V
B CC
R
1 (
R2|| R
DCE)
• From this point onwards, the analysis follows that the
procedure as in “circuit operation” section. Note that if
DCRE > 10R2 then the expression above will revert to
R
V 2
V
1
B CC
R R2 115
Example
Determine VCE and IC in the voltage-divider biased
transistor circuit on the right if DC = 100.
Solution
Determine the dc input resistance at the base:
RIN(base) = βDCRE =(100)(560) = 56 kΩ
Thus, V R
2
V= 3.59 V
1
B CC
R R2
So,
VE = VB – VBE = 2.89 V
and from Ohm’s law,
IE = 5.16 mA
IC ≈ 5.16 mA
and VCE ≈ VCC – IC(RC + RE) = 1.95 V
Since VCE > 0, the transistor is NOT in saturation. 116
Bias Stability
The Thevenin voltage and resistance are:
R
V
Th 2
VCC
R1R 2
RTH = R1R2 / (R1 + R2)
118
Emitter Bias
Current action:
(i) the emitter current
originates at the emitter
power supply (− VEE).
(ii) A small portion of the
emitter current leaves
the transistor through the
base terminal. Base
current passes through
RB to ground.
(iii) the majority of the
An emitter-bias circuit consists of emitter current continues
to the collector. Collector
several resistors and a dual-polarity
current passes through
power supply, a positive and a RC to VCC.
negative supply voltage 119
Circuit Currents and Voltage
• Emitter-bias circuits are always
designed so that VB 0 V.
V V
IE
EE BE
R
• Assuming that ICQ IE and VBE = 0.7 V,
E
V 0.7V
• Note:
EE
ICQ
R E
1) The above absolute value is used to obtain a positive value of ICQ.
2) hFE is not involved in the equation - the emitter bias provides
output values that are highly stable against variations in beta.
121
Circuit Currents and Voltage
• The approximate value of VCEQ can be determine using
VCEQ = VCC − ICRC
• When ICQRC >> 0.7V, which is normally the case, we can ignore −
VE, leaving us with the
VCEQ = VCC − ICQRC
122
Example
Determine the values of ICQ and VCEQ for the amplifier shown
in figure below.
Solution
First, the value of ICQ is
approximated as
V
0
.
7V
12
V 0
.
7
V
EE
I 7
.
5m
W
CQ
R
E 1
.
5k
124
Collector – Feedback Bias
• If IC tries to increases, it drops more
voltage across RC, thereby causing VC
to decrease.
125
Circuit Analysis
• By Ohm’s law, the base current can be expressed as
V CVBE
IB
RB
• Substitute VC = VCC − ICRC and I IC
B
DC
I
C V IR
V
into the first equation: CCC C BE
DC R B
127
Example
Calculate the Q-point values for the circuit below.
Solution
V V
IC CC BE
RC B
R
DC
10
V 0.
7V
I 2.
82m
C
1
.
5kW
W
180
k
100
131
BJT Amplifiers
• They are known as small-signal amplifiers - it uses signals that
take up a relatively small percentage of an amplifier’s
operational range.
• The biasing of a transistor is purely a dc operation (C2). It
establishes a Q-point about which variations in current and
voltage can occur in response to an ac signal.
133
• The coupling capacitors block dc and prevent the internal source
resistance RS and the load resistance RL from changing the dc bias
voltages at the base and collector.
134
• Note that the voltage created at the
collector (VCE) is out-
of-phase with the input voltage
(common-emitter amplifier).
(CB and CC amplifiers do not exhibit this behaviour.)
b hie c
hfev2 1
hoe
hrei1
e e
136
h-Parameters
(hybrid parameters)
• Data sheets only provide h parameters. In parenthesis are the
conditions required to get these parameters.
1. hi : Input impedance (Output shorted)
2. hr : Voltage feedback ratio (Input open)
3. hf : Forward current gain (Output shorted)
4. ho : Output admittance (Input open)
rc'
1. : ac collector resistance
Assume that:
rb' is small enough to be neglected replace r’b with a short.
rc' is very large (hundreds of kW) replace r’c with an open.
138
The conversion equations between r and h
parameters:
ac = h fb hre 1
rc'
hoe
ac = h fe
rb'
ie
h
hre
hoe
1hfe
hre
re'
hoe
139
Interpretation of simplified equivalent circuit:
• re' is the resistance seen looking into the
emitter of a forward-biased transistor. It
appears between the base and the emitter
terminals.
• The collector current Ic is equal to αac Ie.
Also, Ic = βacIb.
143
• As seen previously, the input resistance is
RIN(base) = βDCRE = (150)(560) = 84 kΩ
which is 10 times more than R2 for this particular
case. Thus, we can ignore it.
R 6.
8W
k
V 2
V
12
V2
.
83
V
W
B CC
R1R2 28
.
8k
• And the emitter voltage is
VE = VB – VBE = (2.83) – (0.7) = 2.13 V
145
AC equivalent circuit
146
AC equivalent circuit
• The emitter bypass capacitor, C2 provides an effective short
to the ac signal around the emitter resistor, thus keeping the
emitter at ac ground.
• This allows the amplifier to have maximum gain (RC/ ). It
mustrbe
e
'
large enough so that its reactance over the
frequency range is very small compared to RE.
• A good rule-of-thumb is
10XC < RE
147
AC equivalent circuit
• If the internal resistance, Rs of the ac source is 0 W, then
all of the source voltage appears at the base terminal.
• If the ac source internal resistance Rs is non-zero, three
factors must be taken into account in determining the
actual signal voltage at the base.
They are:
1. the source resistance (Rs),
2. the bias resistance (R1||R2), and
3. the input resistance (Rin(base)).
148
Input Resistance, Rin(base)
• Rin(base) is an ac quantity (in contrast to RIN(base) which is a dc
quantity) and it is also known as the input impedance.
re' 150
Example
Determine the signal voltage at the base of the
transistor in the circuit shown below. This circuit is
the ac equivalent of the amplifier. Assume a 10 mV,
300 Ω signal source. IE was found to be 3.80 mA.
Solution
Determine the ac emitter resistance,
25m
r ' e= = 6.58 Ω
3.80m
Then, Rin(base) = βac
= 1.05 kW
151
Solution
The source voltage is divided down by Rs and Rin(tot), so the
signal voltage at the base is the voltage across Rin(tot).
Rin( tot)
V b= V s= = 7 . 44 mV
Rs +Rin(tot )
V IRC R
A
vc
e
'
C
'
V
b I r
ee r
e
153
Overall Gain
To get the overall gain of the amplifier from the source
voltage to collector voltage, the attenuation (due to the
internal source resistance Rs) of the input circuit must be
included.
• The attenuation from
source to base
multiplied by the gain
from base to collector is
called the overall
amplifier gain.
154
Example
Calculate the base-to-collector voltage gain of
the amplifier shown next, with and without an
emitter bypass capacitor. There is no load
Solution resistor.
From a previous example we know that
re' = 6.58 Ω.
Without C2, the gain is
Av = RC / ( re+' RE) = 1.76
With C2 included, the gain is
Av = RC / =' 152
re
The bypass capacitor makes a
big difference!
155
Further Notes
1. If a load of resistance RL is connected across the output of
the amplifier, the total resistance is then
Rtot = RCRL / (RC + RL).
The voltage gain is written as
Av = Rtot /
re'
• If the load resistance RL >> RC, then Rtot RC and there is no
change in the gain.
156
Bypassing RE produces the maximum voltage
gain and stability problem.
The ac voltage gain is dependent on re’, IE and on
temperature, it will be unstable over temperature changes.
157
Swamping
Note that the total external emitter resistance RE is
formed by two separate emitter resistors RE1 and RE2.
• One of the resistors RE2 is bypassed
and the other is not. Both resistors
affect the dc bias but only RE1 affects
the ac voltage gain:
Av = RC / (re’ + RE1)
158
Example
For the amplifier shown next, determine the total
collector voltage and the total output voltage, both dc
and ac. Draw the waveforms.
159
Solution
Step (1): DC Analysis
RIN(base) = βDC(RE1 + RE2)
= 150 (940 Ω) = 141 kΩ
Since RIN(base) > 10R2, it can be neglected in the
dc base voltage calculation.
VC = VCC − ICRC
= 10 V – (1.12 mA) (4.7 kΩ) = 4.74 V 160
Step(2) AC
Analysis
• Calculate re’:
re’ = 25 mV / IE = 25 mV / 1.12 mA = 22 Ω
161
• The attenuation from source to base is
Attenuation = Vb / Vs = Rin(tot) /(Rs + Rin(tot))
= 7.53 kΩ / (600 Ω + 7.53 kΩ) = 0.93
163
• The coupling capacitor C3 keeps the dc level from getting
to the output, so Vout is equal to the ac portion of the
collector voltage (Vout(p) = 119 mV).
• Source voltage is shown to emphasize phase inversion.
164
Common-Collector (CC) Amplifier
Emitter-follower amplifier (EF).
• The input is applied to base through a coupling capacitor and
the output is at the emitter. The voltage gain of a CC amplifier
is approximately 1.
168
Output Resistance
169
Current Gain
Iout Ie
The current gain is Ai
Iin Iin
• The input current, Iin = Vin / Rin(tot). If R 2
1||R Rin ), then
(base
most of input current goes into the base. Thus, current gain
of amplifier is almost equal to current gain of the transistor,
βac, that is
Ic
Ai βac =
Ib
P I V
A p out
outout
A
iAv
Pin I V
inin
• Since Av ≈ 1, the overall power gain is
Ap ≈ Ai.
171
Example
Determine the total input resistance of the emitter follower shown below.
Also find the voltage gain, current gain, and power gain in terms of
power delivered to the load, RL. Assume βac = 175. And that the
capacitive reactances are negligible at the frequency of operation.
172
Solution
• The ac emitter resistance external to the transistor, Re, is:
Re = RE || RL = 1 kΩ || 1kΩ = 500 Ω
173
Solution
• The voltage
'
gain is almost unity (CC amplifier). By using
we canre determine a more precise value for Av:
VE = [R2/(R1 + R2)]VCC – VBE
= (0.5)(10 V) – 0.7 V = 4.3 V
IE = VE / RE = 4.3 V / 1.0 kΩ = 4.3 mA
re' = 25 mV/IE = 25 mV / 4.3 mA = 5.8 Ω
'
r
So Av = Re / ( +e Re) = 500 Ω / 505.8 Ω = 0.989
174
Solution
• The current gain is Ai = Ie / Iin:
Ie = Ve / Re = AvVb / Re ≈ 1 V / 500 Ω = 2 mA
Iin = Vin / Rin(tot) = 1 V / 8.16 kΩ = 123 μA
Ai =Ie / Iin = 2 mA / 123 μA = 16.3
175
The Darlington Pair
• The maximum achievable input
resistance you can get from a
given CC circuit is limited by
ac.One way to boost the input
resistance is to use a darlington
pair.
177
• CC is often used as an interface between a circuit with a high output resistance
and a low resistance load. In such an application, it is called a buffer.
• E.g.: suppose a common-emitter amplifier with a 1.0 kΩ collector resistance
(output resistance) must drive a low-resistance load e.g. an 8 Ω low-power
speaker that is capacitively coupled to the output of amplifier. The 8 Ω load
(appears to the ac signal) in parallel with the 1 kΩ collector resistor. This results
in an ac collector resistance of
Rc = RC || RL = 1kΩ || 8Ω = 7.94 Ω.
• Obviously this is not acceptable, since most of the voltage gain is lost
Av = Rc / .
For example, if = 5 Ω, the voltage gain is reduced from
Av = RC / = 1 kΩ / 5 Ω' = 200
to re
re' Av = Rc / ' = 7.94 Ω / 5 Ω = 1.59
• We can add a darlington pair torinterface
e the amplifier and the speaker.
re'
178
For the CE amplifier : VCC = 12 V, RC = 1.0 kWand re’ = 5 W.
For the Darlington EF : R1 = 10 kW R2 = 22 kWRE = 22 W RL = 8
W.DC = ac = 100 for both transistors.
(a) Determine the voltage gain of the CE amplifier.
(b) Determine the voltage gain of the Darlington EF amplifier.
(c) Determine the overall voltage gain and compare to the gain of the CE
amplifier driving the speaker directly without the Darlington EF.
179
Solution
The total input resistance of the Darlington emitter-
follower amplifier will act as a load to CE amplifier. In
order to determine the voltage gain for the CE amplifier
VB =for
(R2 this
/ R2 circuit,
+ R1)VCC it =
is (22/32)12V
necessary to calculate
= 8.25 V Rin(tot) EF.
VE = 8.25 V – 1.4 V = 6.85 V
IE = 6.85 V/22 W = 0.311 A
re’ = (25 mV/IE) = 80.3 mW
Re = RE || RL = 22 W || 8 W =5.87 W
The input resistance of the Darlington EF,
Rin(base) EF = ac1 ac2Re = (100)2(80.3 mW5.87 W) = 59.5 kW
The total input resistance,
Rin(tot) EF = R1|| R2||Rin(base) EF = 6162.9 W
182
Voltage Gain
Since the input voltage is Vin = Ve and
the output voltage is Vout = Vc, the
gain becomes
Av = Vout Vc IcRc
IeRc
Vin Ve
Ie re' ||RE
Ie re' ||RE
184
Output Resistance, Current Gain,
Power Gain
Output Resistance
• Looking into the collector, the ac collector resistance, rc’,
appears in parallel with RC. As rc’ is much larger than RC,
Rout ≈ RC
Current Gain
• It is defined as Ai = Iout / Iin. Thus we have
Ai = Ic / Ie ≈ 1
Power Gain
• Since the current gain is approximately unity, by Ap = Ai Av, we
have
Ap ≈ Av
185
Example
Find the input resistance, voltage gain, current
gain, and power gain for the amplifier shown
below. Firstly, find IE so that re’ can be determined.
Then Rin ≈ re’. Since βDCRE >> R2, then
VB = R2 / (R1 + R2) VCC = 1.76 V
VE = VB – 0.7 V = 1.06 V
IE = VE / RE = 1.06 mA
Therefore,
Rin ≈ re’ = 25 mV / IE = 23.6 Ω