Lecture12-Small Signal Model-BJT PDF
Lecture12-Small Signal Model-BJT PDF
Prof. Ming C. Wu
[email protected]
511 Sutardja Dai Hall (SDH)
Introduction to Amplifiers
• Amplifiers: transistors biased in the flat-part of the i-v curves
– BJT: forward-active region
– MOSFET: saturation region
• In these regions, transistors can provide high voltage, current and
power gains
• Bias is provided to stabilize the operating point (the Q-Point) in the
desired region of operation
• Q-point also determines
– Small-signal parameters of transistor
– Voltage gain, input resistance, output resistance
– Maximum input and output signal amplitudes
– Power consumption
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Transistor Amplifiers
BJT Amplifier Concept
The BJT is biased in the active region by dc voltage source VBE. e.g.,
Q-point is set at (IC, VCE) = (1.5 mA, 5 V) with IB = 15 µA (βF = 100)
Total base-emitter voltage is: vBE = VBE + vbe
Collector-emitter voltage is: vCE = VCC – iCRC This is the load line
equation.
Transistor Amplifiers
BJT Amplifier (cont.)
Vce 1.65∠180 o
8 mV peak change in vBE gives 5 mA Av = = = 206∠180 o = −206
Vbe 0.008∠0 o
change in iB and 0.5 mA change in iC.
Minus sign indicates 180o phase
0.5 mA change in iC produces a 1.65 shift between the input and output
V change in vCE . signals.
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Transistor Amplifiers
MOSFET Amplifier Concept
Vds
Av =
Vgs
4∠180 o
Av =
1∠0 o
Av = −4.00
Transistor Amplifiers
Coupling and Bypass Capacitors
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Transistor Amplifiers
dc and ac Analysis – Two Step Analysis
• dc analysis:
– Find dc equivalent circuit by replacing all capacitors by open
circuits and inductors by short circuits.
– Find Q-point from dc equivalent circuit by using appropriate
large-signal transistor model.
• ac analysis:
– Find ac equivalent circuit by replacing all capacitors by short
circuits, inductors by open circuits, dc voltage sources by
ground connections and dc current sources by open circuits.
– Replace transistor by its small-signal model
– Use small-signal ac equivalent to analyze ac characteristics of
amplifier.
– Combine end results of dc and ac analysis to yield total
voltages and currents in the network.
Transistor Amplifiers
dc Equivalent Circuit for BJT Amplifier
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Transistor Amplifiers
ac Equivalent Circuit for BJT Amplifier
RB = R1 R2 =100kΩ 300kΩ
R = RC R3 = 22kΩ 100kΩ
Transistor Amplifiers
dc and ac Equivalents for a MOSFET Amplifier
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Small-Signal Operation
Diode Small-Signal Model
• The slope of the diode characteristic at the Q-point is called the
diode conductance and is given by:
∂iD I #V & I
gd = = S exp%% D (( ≈ D
∂vD Q − po int VT $ VT ' VT
rd = 1
gd
Small-Signal Operation
Diode Small-Signal Model (cont.)
IS VT
gd = and rd =
VT IS
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Small-Signal Operation
BJT Hybrid-Pi Model
Transconductance:
gm = IC ≅ 40IC
VT
Input resistance:
rπ = βoVT = βo or βo = gmrπ
IC gm
• The hybrid-pi small-signal model is Output resistance:
the intrinsic representation of the
BJT. ro = VA +VCE ≅ VA
• Small-signal parameters are IC IC
controlled by the Q-point and are
independent of geometry of the BJT
iB = IB -ib
iC = IC -ic = βF IB − βF ib
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Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Small-Signal Analysis - ac Equivalent Circuit
Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Small-Signal Equivalent Circuit
vc
AvtCE = = −gm RL RL = ro RC R3
vb
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Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Input Resistance and Signal Source Gain
(β o + 1)RE
Common-Emitter Amplifiers
“Rule of Thumb” Design Estimate
RB rπ
AvCE = AvtCE ≅ AvtCE AvtCE = −gm RL RL = ro RC R3
RI + RB rπ
Typically: ro >> RC and R3 >> RC AvCE ≅ −gm RC = −40I C RC
AvCE ≅ −10VCC
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Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Voltage Gain Example
• Problem: Calculate voltage gain, input
resistance and maximum input signal level
for a common-emitter amplifier
• Given data: βF = 100, VA = 75 V, Q-point is
(0.245 mA, 3.39 V)
• Assumptions: Transistor is in active region,
βO = βF. Signals are low enough to be
considered small signals. Room
temperature.
• Analysis:
βo 100
gm = 40I C = 40 ( 0.245mA) = 9.80 mS rπ = = = 10.2 kΩ
gm 9.8mS
VA +VCE 75V + 3.39V
ro = = = 320 kΩ RB = R1 R2 = 160kΩ 300kΩ = 104 kΩ
IC 0.245mA
RL = ro RC RL = 320kΩ 22kΩ 100kΩ = 17.1 kΩ RB rπ = 104kΩ 10.2kΩ = 9.29 kΩ
Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Voltage Gain Example (cont.)
Check the rule-of-thumb estimate: AvCE ≅ −10 (12 ) = −120 (ballpark estimate)
What is the maximum amplitude of the output signal: vo ≤ 5.54mV (−151) = 0.837 V
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Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Voltage Gain Example (cont.)
• Simulation Results: The graph below presents the output voltage
for an input voltage that is a 5-mV, 10-kHz sine wave.
• Note that although the sine wave at first looks good, the positive
and negative peak amplitudes are different indicating the presence
of distortion. The input is near our small-signal limit for linear
operation.
Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Dual Supply Operation - Example
Analysis: To find the Q-point, the
dc equivalent circuit is
constructed.
€
∴I B =3.71 µ A
IC = 65I B = 241 µ A
IE = 66I B = 245 µ A
• Problem: Find voltage gain, input and
output resistances for the circuit above
• Given: βF = 65, VA = 50 V
5−104 IC −VCE −(1.6×104 )IE −(−5)=0
• Assumptions: Active-region operation,
VBE = 0.7 V, small signal operating ∴VCE =3.67 V
conditions.
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Common-Emitter Amplifiers
Dual Supply Operation - Example (cont.)
• Next we construct the ac
equivalent and simplify it.
6.74
kΩ
Rin = RB rπ =6.31 kΩ
gm = 40IC =9.64×10−3 S
Rout = RC ro = 9.57 kΩ
rπ = βo =6.74 kΩ # Rin &
40IC vo
AvCE = = −gm ( Rout R3 ) % ( = −84.0
V vi $ RI + Rin '
ro = A +VCE =223 kΩ
IC Gain Estimate: AvCE ≅ −10 (VCC +VEE ) = −100
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