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TRANSISTORS AND BIASING Main

Transistors are semiconductor devices that act as electrically controlled switches or amplifiers. The two major transistor families are bipolar junction transistors (BJTs) and field-effect transistors (FETs). BJTs require a biasing input current at their control leads and come in NPN and PNP configurations, with NPN using a small positive input voltage and current to control a larger collector-emitter current, while PNP uses a small negative input voltage and current. Transistors are used in almost every electric circuit, including switching, amplifier, oscillator, and digital logic circuits, as they can control larger currents through smaller control signals.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views19 pages

TRANSISTORS AND BIASING Main

Transistors are semiconductor devices that act as electrically controlled switches or amplifiers. The two major transistor families are bipolar junction transistors (BJTs) and field-effect transistors (FETs). BJTs require a biasing input current at their control leads and come in NPN and PNP configurations, with NPN using a small positive input voltage and current to control a larger collector-emitter current, while PNP uses a small negative input voltage and current. Transistors are used in almost every electric circuit, including switching, amplifier, oscillator, and digital logic circuits, as they can control larger currents through smaller control signals.

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Chief Arisa
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

TRANSISTORS AND BIASING

What is a transistor
• Transistors are semiconductor devices that act as either
electrically controlled switches or amplifier controls.
• The beauty of transistors is the way they can control
electric current flow in a manner similar to the way a
faucet controls the flow of water.
• With a faucet, the flow of water is controlled by a control
knob. With a transistor, a small voltage and/or current
applied to a control lead acts to control a larger electric
flow through its other two leads.
Application
• Transistors are used in almost every electric circuit you
can imagine.
• switching circuits,
• amplifier circuits,
• oscillator circuits,
• current source circuits,
• voltage-regulator circuits,
• power-supply circuits,
• digital logic ICs, and
• Any circuit that uses small control signals to control larger currents.
Design and functionality
• Transistors come in a variety of designs
• come with unique control and current flow features.
• Most transistors have a variable current-control feature,
but a few do not.
• Some transistors are normally off until a voltage is applied
to the base or gate, whereas others are normally on until
a voltage is applied.
• Also, on can represent a variable amount of current flow.
• Some transistors require both a small current and a small
voltage applied to their control lead to function, whereas
others only require a voltage.
• Some transistors require a negative voltage and/or output
current at their base lead to function, whereas others
require a
• positive voltage and/or input current at their base.
Families
• The two major families of transistors exist
• bipolar transistors and
• field-effect transistors (FETs).
• The major difference between these two families is that:
• bipolar transistors require a biasing input (or output) current at their
control leads,
• FETs require only a voltage practically no current.
• Bipolar transistors require both positive (holes) and negative
(electrons) carriers to operate, FETs only require one charge carrier
• Because FETs draw little or no current, they have high
input impedances
• FETs are definitely more popular in circuit design today
than bipolar transistors due to
• They draw essentially zero input-output current at their control
leads
• they are easier to manufacture
• cheaper to make (require less silicon)
• and can be made extremely small—making them useful elements
in integrated circuits.
Transistor types
BJT TRANSISTORS AND BIASING
BJTs
• Bipolar junction transistors(BJT) are three-terminal
devices that act as electrically controlled switches or as
amplifier controls
• BJTs come in two configurations
BJT Configuration
NPN configuration PNP Configuration

An npn bipolar transistor pnp transistor uses a small


uses a small input current output base current and
and positive voltage at its negative base voltage
base (relative to its emitter) (relative its emitter) to
to control a much larger control a larger emitter-
collector-to-emitter current. tocollector current.
Applications of BJTs
Their ability to control current flow by means of applied
control signals makes them essential elements in
• Electrically controlled switching circuits, current-regulator
circuits,
• voltage-regulator circuits,
• amplifier circuits,
• oscillator circuits,
• and memory circuits
How BJTs Work
I-V characteristic curve for a BJTt.
• The effects the base current IB and the emitter-to-collector
voltage VEC have on the emitter/collector currents IE and
IC.
Regions of operation
• Saturation : maximum collector current flows and the
transistor acts much like a closed switch from collector to
emitter.

• Cutoff region: the transistor acts like an open switch—


only a very small leakage current flows in this mode of
operation.

• Active région: a near-linear relationship exists between


terminal currents (IB, IC, IE).
• Bias and Q-point
Key Notes

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