ECE492 Section 3 Notes

From eddynetweb's cesspit
Revision as of 00:28, 12 April 2022 by Eddynetweb (talk | contribs) (Starting 3.1 notes on MOSFET.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

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 3.1

What is a MOSFET?

  • Stands for: Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Insulator.
  • Yay!

See Figure 3a.

Has 3 sides:

  • Gate, Drain, and Source
  • The gate current is always 0 (Ig = 0).
  • It is a symmetrical device (drain as source and vice versa).
  • Length of channel is typically 0.03um to 1um
  • Width of channel is typically 1um to 100um.
  • Gate current is typically 0mA (10^-15mA)
  • Drain voltage in position...

Threshold Voltage (Vt)

  • At which a sufficient number of mobile electrons accumulate in the channel region to form a conducting channel.

Effective Voltage (or Overdrive Voltage)

  • Vov = Vgs - Vt

Additional formulas to consider:

  • Kn' = UnCox = Process Transconductance Parameter
    • Un = Electron mobility
    • Cox = Oxide capacitance
    • Kn = MOSFET transconductance parameter = Kn'[w/L]
  • r_DS = Channel Resistance = [1/g_DS] = [1/[UnCox][w/L][Vgs-Vt]]
  • At V_DS, the channel is going to be deepest at the source and shallower at the drain.
  • Channel resistance is inversely proportional to the gate voltage.
  • Channel pinch off:
  • The zero depth of the channel at the drain ends because of V_DS = V_GS - V_E
    • If V_GS < Vtn then no channel, so transistor is working in cut off region (I_D = 0)
  • MOSFET operation
    • Tniode region
    • Saturation region


Now we'll cover (B) Common Emitter Current gain:

  • 50 < B < 200

...and (Alpha) Common Base Current Gain:

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: