The Transistor as an Amplifier
– Amplification is the process of linearly increasing the amplitude of an electrical signal.
– A transistor can act as an amplifier directly using the gain, b.
– Keep in mind that when a transistor is biased in the active (linear) region, the BE junction has a low resistance due to forward bias and the BC junction has a high resistance due to reverse bias.
i) DC and AC quantities
– Amplifier circuits have both ac and dc quantities.
– Capital letters are used will be used for both ac and dc currents.
– Subscript will be capital for dc quantities.
– Subscript will be lowercase for ac quantities.
ii) Transistor amplification
– A transistor amplifies current because the collector current is equal to the base current multiplied by the current gain, b.
– Base current (IB) is small compared to IC and IE.
– Thus, IC is almost equal to IE.
– Consider the following circuit.
– An ac voltage, Vin, is superimposed on the dc bias voltage VBB.
– DC bias voltage VCC is connected to the collector through the collector resistance, RC.
– The ac input voltage produces an ac base current, which results in a much larger ac collector current.
– The ac collector current produces an ac voltage across RC, thus producing an amplified, but inverted, reproduction of the ac input voltage in the active region.
– The forward biased base-emitter junction present low resistance to the ac wave.
– This internal ac emitter resistance is designated r’e.
Ie ? Ic = Vb/ r’e
– The ac collector voltage, Vc = IcRC.
– Since Ie ? Ic, the ac collector voltage is Vc ? IeRC.
– Vb can be considered the transistor ac input voltage where Vb = Vin – IbRB.
– Vc can be considered the transistor ac output voltage.
– The ratio of Vc to Vb is the ac voltage gain, Av, of the transistor circuit.
Av = Vc/Vb
– Substituting IeRC for Vc and Ie r’e for Vb yields
Av = Vc/Vb ? (IeRC)/(Ie r’e) = RC/ r’e
– Thus, amplification depends on the ratio of RC and r’e.
– RC is always considerably larger in value than r’e, thus the output voltage is larger than the input voltage.
Example:
Determine the voltage gain and the ac output voltage for the following circuit if r’e = 50 W.
Solution:
The voltage gain is
Av ? RC/r’e = 1 k W /50 W = 20
Thus the output voltage is
Vout = AvVb = (20)(100 mV) = 2 Vrms
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