0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views

Outline of Chapter 5: ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I

The document outlines chapter 5 of an electronics circuits course, which covers the bipolar junction transistor (BJT). It discusses DC analysis of BJT circuits, where one assumes the transistor is in active mode and calculates voltages and currents. It also examines the boundary between active and saturation modes and calculating the minimum base voltage needed to remain in active mode.
Copyright
© © 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
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views

Outline of Chapter 5: ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I

The document outlines chapter 5 of an electronics circuits course, which covers the bipolar junction transistor (BJT). It discusses DC analysis of BJT circuits, where one assumes the transistor is in active mode and calculates voltages and currents. It also examines the boundary between active and saturation modes and calculating the minimum base voltage needed to remain in active mode.
Copyright
© © 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
You are on page 1/ 32

Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I

Computer Engineering

Outline of Chapter 5
• 1- Introduction to The Bipolar Junction Transistor
• 2- Active Mode Operation of BJT
• 3- DC Analysis of Active Mode BJT Circuits
• 4- BJT as an Amplifier
• 5- BJT Small Signal Models
• 6- CEA, CEA with RE, CBA, & CCA
• 7- Integrated Circuit Amplifiers

BJTs 1
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

DC Analysis – Requires Assumptions


Find voltages & currents

Process:
a) Assume active mode
operation; VBE = 0.7V
b) Based on assumption,
calculate branch voltages
and currents
c) Verify active mode by
checking VCB > 0V

BJTs 2
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Perform Analysis
IE 1mA
IB = = = 10 μA
β + 1 99 + 1
β 99
IC I C = αI E = IE = 1mA = 0.99mA
β +1 99 + 1
IB VC = 15 − I C RC = 15 − (0.99m )(5k ) = 10.05V

+ VB = 0 − I B RB = −(10 μA)(100k ) = − 1V
VBE=
-
0.7
Check VBE (0.7V) and VCB (reverse):
VE = VB − VBE = (−1) − 0.7 = −1.7V
VCB = VC − VB = 10.05 − (−1) = 11.05V
BJTs 3
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

DC Analysis
Find voltages & currents

IC Process:
a) Assume ACTIVE mode
IB
operation; VBE = 0.7V
b) Based on assumption,
calculate branch voltages
and currents
IE c) Verify ACTIVE mode by
checking VCB

BJTs 4
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

DC Analysis
VE + 15 0 − VB
IE = IB =
1k 100k
VE + 15 0 − VB
IC I E = (β + 1)I B = (β + 1)
1k 100k
IB VE + 15 − V − 0 .7
V B = VE + 0 . 7 = (100) E
1k 100k

+ VE = − 7.85V I E = 7.15mA
0.7 Get:
- VB = − 7.15V I B = 71.5μA
IE β
I C = αI E = IE =
99
(7.15m ) = 7.08mA
β +1 100
VC = 15 − I C RC = 15 − (7.08m )(2k ) = 0.84V
Check: VCB = 7.99V (reverse biased) – OK
BJTs 5
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Edge of Active Mode


•From previous slide, found:
VC = 15 − I C RC = 15 − (7.08m )RC
IC RC
•In general, increasing RC will not
IB change IC significantly
•More significant consequence of
+ increasing RC is a decrease of VC
0.7 •If RC is too large, decrease of VC will
-
IE
cause BJT to leave active mode and
transition to saturation mode
•Recall, active/saturation boundary
occurs for VC > VB; VCB > 0V
BJTs 6
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Calculate Transition Point


-Use relationship for VC & IC:
IC RC VC = 15 − I C RC = 15 − (7.08mA)RC

IB -Use previous result for VB = -7.15V,


and write expression for RC as a
+
function of VC; solve for maximum
0.7
- RC in order to stay in active mode:
IE VC = VB ;15 − (7.08mA)RC = −7.15V
VB=-7.15V
-For active mode operation:
RC ≤ 3.13kΩ
BJTs 7
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

DC Analysis Comments

• Do not know a priori that BJT is in active mode


• Use approach similar to diode CVDM analysis
– Assume active mode operation (VBE = 0.7V)
– Solve circuit
– Verify active mode operation (check VCB)
• Generally never use exponential model for IC in
basic DC analysis
• Generally neglect Early Voltage effect in DC
analysis

BJTs 8
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

pnp Transistor Biasing


Process:
a) Assume active mode
operation; VEB = 0.7V
IE b) Based on assumption,
calculate branch voltages
and currents
c) Verify active mode by
IB checking VBC ≥ 0V

IC

BJTs 9
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Example: Find VB That Keeps BJT Active


• As VB decreases, IE & IC increase, VC
increases
• Minimum VB condition exists while
IE maintaining VEB = 0.7V
+
0.7 • In active mode: VE-VB = 0.7V
- 10 − VE
IE =
2k
IB VC 10 − (VB + 0.7 )
IC = = α I E = 0.99 ⋅
1k 2k
VC = 4.6 − 0.495VB
IC
At active/saturation boundary, VC = VB:
VB ≥ 3.08V
BJTs 10
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Transistor Sensitivity to IB
β is 107

RB = 100kΩ RB = 200kΩ
VB = 0.7V VB = 0.7V
IC 5 − 0 .7 5 − 0.7
IB = = 43μA IB = = 21.5μA
100k 200k
IB I C = βI B = (107)(43μA) IC = βI B = (107)(21.5μA)
= 4.601mA = 2.4075mA

+ VC = 10 − (4.601mA)(2kΩ) VC = 10 − (2.4075mA)(2kΩ)
0.7
- = 0.798 = 5.185

• Small changes in base current result in large current changes


in the collector: IC = βIB.
• Doubling the base current, causes the collector voltage to
decrease more than 6.5 times.
BJTs 11
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Transistor Sensitivity to β
Find β condition to keep BJT active
5 − 0 .7
VB = 0.7V I B = = 43μA
100k
IC I C = βI B = β ⋅ 43μA

IB VC = 10 − I C (2k ) = 10 − 0.086 β
Let VC=VB=0.7
+
0.7
-
VC ≥ VB Ö β ≤ 108
• β can vary; want designs with DC
conditions that are insensitive to β
BJTs 12
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Avoiding β Sensitivity
Find β condition to keep BJT active
10 − 4.7
VE = 4.7V I E = = 2.65mA
IE
2k
β
+ IC = α I E = 2.65mA
0.7 β +1
-
β
VC = I C (1kΩ) = (2.65) Let VC=VB=4V
IB β +1

IC
VC ≤ VB Ö β ≥ −2.96 OK for any β

• Putting resistance in the emitter


generally stabilizes DC biasing
BJTs 13
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Transistor Biasing
• Typical resistor arrangement for
base-biasing of the BJT amplifier
configurations.
• Start by simplifying base network
RB1 & RB2

BJTs 14
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Thevenin Circuit for Transistor Biasing


– VEQ: use superposition
RB 2
VEQ = 15 = 5V
+15V source RB1 + RB 2
RB1
VEQ = (− 10 ) = −6.67V
−10V source RB1 + RB 2

∴VEQ = −1.67V

– R: by inspection

REQ = RB1 RB 2 = 33.3kΩ


BJTs 15
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Example
VE + 10 − 1.67 − VB
IE = IB =
3k 83.3k
VE + 10 − 1.67 − VB
IC I E = (β + 1)I B = (β + 1)
3k 83.3k
VE + 10 − V − 2.37
V B = V E + 0 .7 = (100 ) E
3k 83.3k
VE = − 4.03V I E = 1.99mA
IB +0.7 Get:
VB = − 3.33V I B = 19.9 μA
-
β 99
IE I C = αI E = IE = (1.99m ) = 1.97mA
β +1 100
VC = 15 − I C RC = 15 − (1.97m )(2k ) = 5.15V
Check: VCB = 8.48V (reverse biased) – OK
BJTs 16
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

AC-Signal Coupling
• Couple an input signal via
a coupling capacitor:
– C→∞ is open circuit at
DC, short circuit for AC
signals.
– If RB1 & RB2 not present,
BJT would not be DC
biased
– C prevents signal source
from having to provide
DC current
– Completely decouples DC
biasing from signal source
BJTs 17
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Two-Stage BJT DC Circuits Analysis


• Analysis approach: perform
IC2 DC analysis on individual
transistors.
• In this example, decouple at
IC1
VC1 - VB2 circuit connection
IB2
• Assume that IB2 = 0 and
calculate VB2
• Analyze each BJT separately
IE1 IE2 • Compare results for IB2 and IC1
• Through iteration/simulation,
can verify approximation
BJTs 18
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Q1 Analysis
2 assumptions: a) active mode, and b) no
current flowing into Q2 via VC1 node: IB2=0
IC1
− 0.7 + 10
VE = −0.7V IE = = 4.65mA
2k
IB1 β
IC = α I E = 4.65mA = 4.604mA
β +1
+
0.7 VC = 10 − I C (2kΩ)
-
= 10 − (4.605mA)(2kΩ) = 0.79V
IE1
VE1 = − 0.7V I E1 = 4.65mA
I B1 = 46.5μA
VC1 = 0.79V I C1 = 4.60mA
BJTs 19
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Q2 Analysis – Same Assumptions


2 assumptions: a) active mode, and b) no
current flowing into Q2 via VC1 node: IB2=0
IC2
VE = 0.79 − 0.7 = 0.09V
VC1
=0.79 0.09 + 10
IE = = 5.045mA
+ 2k
IB~0 0.7 β
- IC = α I E = 5.045mA = 4.995mA
β +1
VC = 10 − I C (1kΩ)
IE2 = 10 − (4.995mA)(1kΩ) = 4.995V

VE 2 = 0.09V I E 2 = 5.05mA
VC 2 = 4.995V I C 2 = 4.995mA
BJTs 20
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Compute Q2 Base Current


From previous:
IC2
β
VC1 IC = α I E = 5.045mA = 4.995mA
=0.79 β +1
+
IB~ 0.7 IC
4.995mA
- IB = = = 50.45μA
50.45 β 99
μA
IE2

BJTs 21
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Iterate to Get Exact Solution; Verify On Own


Add IB2 to IC1 current flowing in 2kΩ
I R = IC1 + I B2 = 4.604+ 0.0505= 4.6545mA
IR VC1 =10− I R (2kΩ)
=10− (4.6545mA)(2kΩ) = 0.691
Re-DO the calculations for Q2:
VE2 =0.691−0.7 = −0.01V
− 0.01 + 10
IE2 = = 4.995mA
2k
β
IC 2 = α I E 2 = 4.995mA = 4.945mA
β +1
VC 2 = 10 − I C 2 (1kΩ)
= 10 − (4.945mA)(1kΩ) = 4.945V

IC 2 4.945mA
I B2 = = = 49.95μA
β 99
BJTs 22
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

DC Analysis of Active Mode


BJT Circuits – Summary
• General approach to active mode DC analysis
• Collector resistance and its effect on active mode
operation
• Sensitivity of BJT DC bias to variations in β, and how
to avoid it
• Practical biasing arrangement for coupling AC signals
• Analysis approach to DC analysis of
circuits involving multiple BJTs

BJTs 23
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Outline of Chapter 5
• 1- Introduction to The Bipolar Junction Transistor
• 2- Active Mode Operation of BJT
• 3- DC Analysis of Active Mode BJT Circuits
• 4- BJT as an Amplifier
• 5- BJT Small Signal Models
• 6- CEA, CEA with RE, CBA, & CCA
• 7- Integrated Circuit Amplifiers

BJTs 24
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

BJT Signal Analysis


• Input has DC
and AC components
• Output has DC and
AC components
• Because the two are
linearly super-
imposed, can separate
DC and AC analysis
as did with diode

BJTs 25
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

DC Analysis – Operating Point, IC vs VBE


• Kill AC sources
• Operating point determined
by VBE

iC
DC Operating Point

IC

VBE vBE
BJTs 26
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

BJT Signal Analysis – iC vs vBE


IC Consider superposition of
Operating an AC signal at the DC
Point
operating point

– Slope of iC-vBE curve at


operating defined as BJT
transconductance, gm

⎛ vBE ⎞
iC = I S exp⎜⎜ ⎟⎟
⎝ VT ⎠

VBE
BJTs 27
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

gm Operating Point Dependence


• Since gm represents slope at a ∂iC
fixed operating point, can gm ≡
∂vBE iC = I C
derive an expression for gm, at
this operating point ⎛ vBE ⎞
iC = I S exp⎜⎜ ⎟⎟
⎝ VT ⎠
• Take derivative and simplify ∂i ⎛ VBE ⎞ 1
• Final expression for gm
C
= I S exp⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ ⋅
∂vBE iC = I C ⎝ VT ⎠ VT
indicates BJT operating point
dependence based on IC, the IC
DC collector current. IC
gm =
VT
BJTs 28
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

BJT Small Signal – iC vs vBE


IC Define transconductance
Operating
as slope of the iC-vBE curve
Point Slope at an operating point:
= gm

In the small signal limit,


ic(t) can write expression for
gm as follow:
ic (t )
gm =
vbe (t )

gm determines the BJT gain


vbe(t) VBE
BJTs 29
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Common Emitter BJT Amplifier


• Apply small signal
at base: vs(t)=vbe(t)
ic (t ) = g m vbe (t ) • Results in signal
current, ic(t), at
collector
• Signal current
through RC
0 − vc (t) = ic RC produces output
vc (t) = −gmvbe (t)RC voltage at BJT
collector terminal

BJTs 30
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Common Emitter BJT Voltage Gain


• Define voltage gain:
vc (t )
ic (t ) = g m vbe (t ) AV = = − g m RC
vbe (t )

0 − vc (t) = ic RC
vc (t) = −gmvbe (t)RC

BJTs 31
Department of Electrical and ECSE-330B Electronic Circuits I
Computer Engineering

Common Emitter BJT Voltage Gain


• From SPICE:

Input

Output

BJTs 32

You might also like