Transistor
Transistor
Transistor
Lecture Overview
• What is a Transistor?
• History
• Types
• Characteristics
• Applications
What is a Transistor?
• Semiconductors: ability to change
from conductor to insulator
• Can either allow current or prohibit
current to flow
• Useful as a switch, but also as an
amplifier
• Essential part of many technological
advances
A Brief History
– npn.
– pnp.
• Most common: npn (focus
on it).
Developed by
pnp bipolar junction transistor
Shockley (1949)
BJT NPN Transistor
• 1 thin layer of p-type, sandwiched between 2 layers of n-type.
• N-type of emitter: more heavily doped than collector.
• With VC>VB>VE:
– Base-Emitter junction forward biased, Base-Collector reverse biased.
– Electrons diffuse from Emitter to Base (from n to p).
– There’s a depletion layer on the Base-Collector junction no flow of e-
allowed.
– BUT the Base is thin and Emitter region is n+ (heavily doped) electrons
have enough momentum to cross the Base into the Collector.
– The small base current IB controls a large current IC
BJT characteristics
• Current Gain:
– α is the fraction of electrons
that diffuse across the narrow
Base region
– 1- α is the fraction of electrons
that recombine with holes in
I C I E
the Base region to create base
current I B (1 ) I E
• The current Gain is expressed
in terms of the β (beta) of the IC
transistor (often called hfe by
manufacturers). IB 1
• β (beta) is Temperature and
Voltage dependent.
• It can vary a lot among
transistors (common values for
signal BJT: 20 - 200).
NPN Common Emitter circuit
• Emitter is grounded.
• Base-Emitter starts to conduct with VBE=0.6V,IC flows and it’s IC=IB.
• Increasing IB, VBE slowly increases to 0.7V but IC rises exponentially.
• As IC rises ,voltage drop across RC increases and VCE drops toward
ground. (transistor in saturation, no more linear relation between I C
and IB)
Common Emitter characteristics
No current flows
Operation region summary
•Assume to be in active
region -> VBE=0.7V
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