Chapter 4: Difference between revisions
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*NPN: Not Pointing iN |
*NPN: Not Pointing iN |
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*PNP: Pointing iN Please |
*PNP: Pointing iN Please |
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*The arrow is for the emitter current |
*The arrow is for the emitter current. |
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:*For an NPN the current flows into the collector. For a PNP the current flows out of the collector. |
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===How a BJT works=== |
===How a BJT works=== |
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Revision as of 11:03, 3 March 2010
Bipolar Junction Transistor
- NPN: Not Pointing iN
- PNP: Pointing iN Please
- The arrow is for the emitter current.
- For an NPN the current flows into the collector. For a PNP the current flows out of the collector.
How a BJT works
Large-Signal DC models
Base-Emitter | Collector-Base | Region |
---|---|---|
FB | FB | Saturation |
FB | RB | Active |
RB | FB | Reverse Active |
RB | RB | Cutoff |
Region | NPN | PNP |
---|---|---|
Saturation | and | and |
Active | and | and |
Cutoff | and | and |
- Active: The normal mode of operation. This mode has the largest common-emitter current gain.
- Reverse Active: The collector and emitter roles are reversed. Most BJTs are not symmetrical, thus and take on different values.
- Saturation: High current from the emitter to collector. Logical "on".
- Cutoff: Very little current flow. Logical "off".
- What are the Saturation, Reverse Active and Cutoff regions used for?
- Why do we always seem to use a common emitter configuration?
- What does the Reverse Active large-signal model look like? How about graphically?
- What is the Triode region?
- For the Saturation region, why is 0.2V the magic number for V_CE?