ECE492 Section 2 Notes
Welcome! Notes for Spring 2022 Electronic Circuits course. Will make this more pretty as things evolve.
My goal is to make Electronic Circuits so easily digestible, you could teach a middle schooler. We'll see if this works.
Prologue
Hey how are you. I will insert something here later. :)
Section 2.1
We'll begin by covering a Bi-polar Junction Transistor, also known as BJT.
What is it exactly? Well, it's a transistor.
- It is a 3 terminal devices.
- It is a unsymmetrical device.
- It amplifies the signal.
There are two types of BJTs:
- NPN, in which...
- PNP, in which...
Now we'll cover (B) Common Emitter Current gain:
- 50 < B < 200
...and (Alpha) Common Base Current Gain:
V-I Characteristics of Transistors:
- AAAA
NPN Transistor Example:
- Cut Off: Both junction are reverse biased.
- Saturation: Both junction are forward biased.
- Active: One junction is forward biased, another one is reverse biased.
Understanding cut off regions for NPN transistors:
- Cut off region (open switch - both junctions one reverse biased)
- Saturation region (closed switch)
- Active region (amplification - one junction forward biased another is reverse biased)
- Breakdown region (Damaged - acts like open circuit essentially)
How do you know when one of these three (or four counting breakdown) apply?
- Voltage
- VE < VB < Vc
- VE < VB > Vc
- VE > VB < Vc
- VE > VB > Vc
- NPN
- Active
- Saturation
- Cut off
- Reverse active
- PNP
- Reverse active
- Cut off
- Saturation
- Active
Understanding common emitter (CE) configuration
- Consider the following configurations...
Consider the following example:
- We'll assume that VB is equal to 0 (since it is grounded).
- Start solving the example by assuming active mode of operation.
- In active mode of operation
- BBE = 0.7 (NPN), BCE >= 0.3V
- BEB = 0.7 (PNP), BEB >= 0.3V
Therefore, VEB = 0.7V = VE - VB such that VB = 0
Header 2
It sometimes allow current, and sometimes it doesn't.
Assignment 1.1
We'll take this and plug it into to find x2: