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Chapter5 PDF

The document summarizes the key concepts of bipolar junction transistor (BJT) small signal analysis. It discusses three common BJT configurations - common-base, common-emitter, and common-collector - and how to derive their re equivalent circuit models. It also provides examples to calculate voltage gain, current gain, input and output impedances for different configurations based on the re model.

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

Chapter5 PDF

The document summarizes the key concepts of bipolar junction transistor (BJT) small signal analysis. It discusses three common BJT configurations - common-base, common-emitter, and common-collector - and how to derive their re equivalent circuit models. It also provides examples to calculate voltage gain, current gain, input and output impedances for different configurations based on the re model.

Uploaded by

Tonmoy
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
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Analog Electronics I

Bipolar Junction
Transistor (BJT)
- AC Analysis
Subtopics
Introduction to BJT Small Signal Analysis
1 Amplification in the AC domain
2 BJT transistor modeling
3 The re Transistor Model

BJT Small Signal Analysis


1 Common-Emitter fixed-bias configuration.
2 Voltage divider bias.
3 Common Emitter bias.
4 Emitter-follower configuration.
5 Common-base configuration.
6 Collector-feedback configuration.
Amplification in AC Domain

 For a system that has input power Pi and output power


P0, the power efficiency can be defined as η = P0 / Pi
and it is not greater than 1.
 However, if the factor of applied dc power to be
considered, the conversion efficiency can be greater
than one which is defined as η = P0(ac) / Pi(dc)
Amplification in AC Domain

 In this chapter, the amplification will be


expressed as voltage gain (Av) and current gain
(Ai)
Vo
Av 
Vi
Io
Ai 
Ii
AC & DC Supplies

DC supply

AC components
AC supplies
AC equivalent

 To do analysis in ac-domain, the circuit has to


transform into its ac equivalent circuit
 There are four steps have to be taken:
1. Set all DC source to zero (grounded)
2. Replace all capacitors with a short-circuit equivalent
3. Remove elements that will be bypass by the short-circuit
equivalent
4. Redraw the network for convenient look
AC equivalent

 Consider a voltage-divider bias configuration:


AC equivalent

 Step 1: Set all DC source to zero (grounded)


AC equivalent

 Step 2: Replace all capacitors with a short-circuit equivalent


AC equivalent

 Step 3: Remove elements that will be bypass by the short-


circuit equivalent
AC equivalent

 Step 4: Redraw the network for convenient look


BJT Transistor Modeling

 3 types of modeling:
– re model
– hybrid equivalent model
– hybrid π model
 re model will be focused throughout the class
 Before applying these models to a circuit, the
circuit itself must be converted into an ac
equivalent network (as for only ac response are
interested)
re Transistor Model

 In this approach, the important parameter of the


equivalent circuit was determined by the actual
operating conditions
 There will be 3 BJT configuration:
– common-base (CB)
– common-emitter (CE)
– common-collector (CC)
re Transistor Model

 Lets reflect the BJT equivalent circuit as in two-port network where


the current and impedance are assumed going into the network
regardless whether it’s an input or an output
CB Configuration

 Lets consider a pnp-BJT first:


CB Configuration

 By examining the input, the transistor’s arrow from terminal E to B means


that the current is supposed to be in that direction. As for that, a diode is
suitable for its equivalent representation.
 At the output, the collector current is related to emitter current by equation
Ic = αIe. A dependent source is very suitable for its equivalent
representation
CB Configuration

 For ac response, the diode can be replaced with an


equivalent ac resistance
 AC resistance of a diode are determined as rac =
26 mV / ID. As for the diode current in this case is
IE, the equivalent ac resistance can be expressed
as:
26 mV
re 
IE notice the capital letter
is for dc level
CB Configuration

 The re equivalent model:

At input:
Vi  Veb  I e re
Ii  Ie
Vi I e re
 Zi    re
Ii Ie
CB Configuration

 For output, I0 = -IC due to the two-port reverse current


 V0 will be determined later when load (RL) is inserted
 For Z0, it will be determined by the transistor’s output characteristic:
 Notice that the slope
remains the same for any
input current
 And the slope is very close
to a perfect horizontal
 This means the resistance
is infinity (Z0 ≈ ∞ Ω)
CB Configuration

 If a load (RL) is connected at output terminal,


voltage gain (Av) and current gain (Ai) can be
defined
– For Av − For Ai:
Vi  I i Z i  I e re Ii  Ie
V0   I 0 Z 0  ( I c )(RL )  I e RL I 0   I c  I e
V0 I e RL RL I 0  I e
 Av     Ai    
Vi I e re re Ii Ie
CB Configuration

 A load is connected at the output terminal:


CB Configuration

 For npn transistor, the only difference is the current flow


 For this case the current Ii and I0 are reversed resulting in
Ii = -Ie and I0 = IC = αIe
Problem 1

 Question:
– For the common-base configuration, an ac signal of
10 mV is applied, resulting in an emitter current of
0.5 mA. If α = 0.980, determine:
a. Zi
b. V0 if RL = 1.2 kΩ
c. Av
d. Z0
e. Ai
f. Ib
Problem 1

 Solution:
– Convert the CB – And then convert it into the
configuration into its re equivalent circuit:
equivalent circuit:
Problem 1

 Given:
– ac voltage, Vi = 10 mV
– Ie = 0.5 mA
– α = 0.980

Remember:
small letter subscript for ac
capital letter subscript for dc
Problem 1

a) As for Zi = re:
Vi Vi 10m
Z i  re     20 
I i I e 0.5m
b) Applying nodal analysis at V0:
V0
 I0 
RL
V0   I 0 RL  ( I c ) RL  I e RL
 (0.980)(0.5m)(1.2k )  0.588 V
Problem 1

c) For voltage gain, Av = V0 / Vi:


V0 0.588
Av    58.8
Vi 10m
d) For Z0, by removing the RL will result in high
impedance (open-circuit equivalent):
 Z0   
Problem 1

e) For current gain, Ai = Io / Ii:


I 0  I C  I e
Av       0.980
Ii Ie Ie
f) All BJT have the same current equation:
Ie  Ib  Ic
 I b  I e  I c  I e  I e  (1   ) I e
 (1  0.980)0.5m  10 A
CE Configuration

 Lets consider a CE configuration using an npn


transistor:
CE Configuration

 Transforming into its  Same with CB


equivalent ac model: configuration, at input
terminal the current must
flow from terminal B to E
(equivalent to a diode)
 At output terminal, the
collector current is
dependent to the base
current, Ic = βIb (equivalent
to a dependent source)
CE Configuration

 Transforming the ac equivalent model into re


equivalent model:
CE Configuration

 In order to convert the re model in Figure 1 to re model in Figure 2, the


current Ie need to independent by not depending on Ib and Ic. As for
that re need to be reconfigured

Figure 1 Figure 2
CE Configuration

 In dc, the emitter current IE = (β + 1)IB. The equation still remains the
same in ac condition:
I e  (   1) I b
 All the input parameters will be:
Vi  Vbe  I e re  (   1) I b re
Ii  Ib
Vi (   1) I b re
 Zi    (   1)re
Ii Ib
 However, in ac, β is usually sufficiently larger than 1, so the
Z i  re
approximation:
CE Configuration

 For output, I0 = IC and V0 will be determined when RL is inserted


 For Z0, it will be determined by the transistor’s output characteristic:
 Notice that the slope is different from various input current
 As for that, a resistance r0
connected from terminal C to E
is equivalent to this slope
(Z0 = r0 Ω)
CE Configuration

 The complete re model for CE configuration:


CE Configuration

 For a load situation:

ro
Problem 2

 Question:
– Using the model given, determine the following for a
common-emitter amplifier if β = 80, IE = 2 mA and r0 =
40 kΩ.
a) Zi
b) Ib
c) Ai if RL = 1.2 kΩ
d) Av if RL = 1.2 kΩ
Problem 2

 Solution:
a) From the re model given, Zi = βre:
26 mV 26m
re    13 
IE 2m
 Z i  re  80(13)  1.04 k
b) Ib can be obtained from IE:
I E  (   1) I B
IE 2m
 IB    24.69 A
  1 80  1
Even though IB is a dc current, Ib = IB due to the current can only
flow in one direction (diode equivalent):  I  24.69 A
b
Problem 2

c) For Ai, examine the Ii and I0 first:


For I0, r0 and RL is in parallel. In that case, Vec can be
obtained:
Vec Vec
I b  
r0 RL
I b r0 RL
(80)(24.69 )(40k )(1.2k )
Vec    2.301 V
r0  RL 40k  1.2k

From Ohm’s law:


Vec 2.301
I0  I L    1.918 mA
RL 1.2k
Problem 2

As Ii is equal to Ib, the current gain can be obtained now:


I 0 1.918m
Ai    77.68
d) For Av: I i 24.69

V0 Vce Vce  2.301


Av      89.61
Vi Vbe I b re (80)(24.69 )(13)
CC Configuration

 The re equivalent for CC configuration is the


same with CE configuration except for its current
flow’s direction
Things to Remember

 re model of CE configuration  re model of CB configuration


using npn transistor: using pnp transistor:

VBE  0.7 but Vbe  0.7


Small Signal Analysis (AC analysis)

 For better understanding, subtopic will be rearrange by referring to the


chart below:
Fixed-bias (CE: bypassed)

 Due to the absent of RE, fixed-bias configuration will be automatically


categorize under CE bypassed
 The configuration:
Fixed-bias (CE: bypassed)

 Transform the circuit into its ac equivalent:


Fixed-bias (CE: bypassed)

 Transform the npn transistor into re model:

 After this, the analysis can be done


Example 3

 For the network given:


a. Determine re
b. Find Zi (with ro = ∞ Ω)
c. Calculate Zo (with ro = ∞
Ω)
d. Determine Av (with ro =
∞ Ω)
e. Repeat part (c) and (d)
including ro = 50 kΩ in
all calculations and
compare results
Example 3

a. Determine re:
– As re is determine by IE, the DC biasing needs to be analyze first
VBE  VB  VE  0.7
VE  0
VB  0.7

12  0.7
IB   24.04 A
470k
 I E  (   1) I B  (101)(24.04 )  2.43 mA

26 mV 26m
re    10.71 
IE 2.43m
Example 3

b. Find Zi (with ro = ∞ Ω)
 Transform the circuit into its re model ac equivalent circuit:

470 kΩ

Z i  RB re  470k (100)(10.71)  1.07 k


Example 3

c. Calculate Zo (with ro = ∞ Ω)
 As ro = ∞ Ω, ro is
equivalent to an open-
circuit
Z o  RC  3 k 3 kΩ

d. Determine Av (with ro = ∞ Ω)

Vo  I c Rc  I b Rc Rc 3k
Av       280.11
Vi I b re I b re re 10.71
Example 3

e. Repeat part (c) and (d)


including ro = 50 kΩ in all
calculations and compare
results
Z o  RC ro  3k 50k  2.83 k 3 kΩ
Vo V
I b   o
ro RC
I b ro RC
Vo  
ro  RC
Vo V I r R 1 ro RC (50k )(3k )
Av   o  b o C     264.26
Vi I b re ro  RC I b re re ro  RC  10.71(50k  3k )
Problem 4

 For the network given, determine Vcc for a voltage gain AV = -200
Problem 4

 Transform the circuit into its re model ac equivalent circuit:


Problem 4

 Examine Vo and Vi as Av is given: -200 (ro is set to open-circuit


equivalent due to ro = ∞ Ω). re can be obtained:
V  I b RC  RC
Av  o  
Vi I b  re re
 4.7 k
 200 
re
 re  23.5 
 From re, IE can be obtained (DC analysis): 26 mV
re 
IE
26m
23.5 
IE
 I E  1.11 mA
Problem 4

 IB can be obtained from IE:


I E  (   1) I B
1.11m  91I B
 I B  12.16 A

 VB = 0.7 V due to VE = 0 V
 From this, Vcc can be obtained:
V  VB
I B  cc
RB
Vcc  0.7
12.16 
1M
Vcc  12.86 V
Emitter-bias (CE: bypassed)
 Consider an emitter-bias  Its re model ac equivalent circuit:
configuration:

 By bypassing RE, the equivalent


circuit above is results in the same
equivalent circuit as in fixed-bias
configuration
 As for that, the analysis is the same
as fixed-bias configuration
Voltage-Divider Bias (CE: bypassed)

 The voltage-divider bias configuration would be:


Voltage-Divider Bias (CE: bypassed)

 The re model ac equivalent circuit would be:

 Notice the difference in input impedance but the output impedance


remains the same as fixed-bias configuration
Example 5

 For the network given,


determine:
a. re
b. Zi
c. Zo (ro = ∞ Ω)
d. Av (ro = ∞ Ω)
e. The parameters of parts
(b) through (d) if ro = 50
kΩ and compare results
Example 5

a. Determine re
– Use DC analysis
– Testing βRE ≥ 10R2: (90)(1.5k )  (10)(8.2k )
135k  82k (satisfied)
– The rest of the analysis: R2 8.2k
VB  VCC  (22)  2.81 V
R1  R2 56k  8.2k
VBE  VB  VE  0.7
VE  VB  VBE  2.81  0.7  2.11
VE  0 2.11
IE    1.41 mA
RE 1.5k
26 mV 26m
 re    18.44 
IE 1.41m
Example 5

b. Determine Zi
– Transform into its re model ac equivalent circuit:

– By looking from the input, R1, R2 and βre is connected in parallel

 Z i  R1 R2 re  56k 8.2k (90)(18.44)  1.35 k


Example 5

c. Determine Zo
– As ro = ∞ Ω, leaving only RC as the output impedance
Z o  RC  6.8 k
d. Determine Av

Vo  I c Rc  I b Rc Rc 6.8k
Av       368.76
Vi I b re I b re re 18.44
Example 5

e. Determine the parameters of parts (b) through (d) if ro = 50 kΩ and


compare results
– For Zi, it remains the same because nothing is changed at input
Z i  1.35 k
– For Zo, the additional ro results in ro and RC connected in parallel
Z o  ro RC  50k 6.8k  5.99 k
– For Av: Vo V
I b   o
ro RC
I b ro RC
Vo  
ro  RC
Vo I b ro RC 1 ro RC
Av      324.62
Vi ro  RC I b re re ro  RC 
Problem 6

 For the network


given:
a. Determine re
b. Calculate Zi and Zo
c. Find Av
d. Repeat parts (b) and
(c) with ro = 25 kΩ
Problem 6

a. Determine re
– Use DC analysis
– Testing βRE ≥ 10R2: (100)(1.2k )  (10)(4.7k )
120k  47k (satisfied)
– The rest of the analysis: R2 4.7k
VB  VCC  (16)  1.72 V
R1  R2 39k  4.7k
VBE  VB  VE  0.7
VE  VB  VBE  1.72  0.7  1.02
VE  0 1.02
IE    0.85 mA
RE 1.2k
26 mV 26m
 re    30.59 
IE 0.85m
Problem 6

b. Calculate Zi and Zo
– Transform into its re model ac equivalent circuit:

Z i  R1 R2 re  39k 4.7k (100)(30.59)  1.769 k


Z o  ro Rc  50k 3.9k  3.62 k
Problem 6

c. Find Av

Vo V
I b   o
ro RC
I b ro RC
Vo  
ro  RC
Vo I r R 1 ro RC (50k )(3.9k )
Av   b o C     118.27
Vi ro  RC I b  re re ro  RC  30.59(50k  3.9k )
Problem 6

d. Repeat parts (b) and (c) with ro = 25 kΩ


Z i  1.769 k
Z o  ro Rc  25k 3.9k  3.37 k
Vo V
I b   o
ro RC
I b ro RC
Vo  
ro  RC
Vo I b ro RC 1 ro RC (25k )(3.9k )
Av       110.29
Vi ro  RC I b  re re ro  RC  30.59(25k  3.9k )
Problem 7

 For the network


given:
a. Determine re
b. Calculate VB and VC
c. Determine Zi and Av
= Vo / Vi
Problem 7

a. Determine re
– Use DC analysis
– Testing βRE ≥ 10R2: (180)(2.2k )  (10)(56k )
396k  560k (not satisfied)
– As βRE ≥ 10R2 is not satisfied, ETH and RTH needs to be
calculated (exact analysis)
R2 56k
ETH  VCC  (20)  4.06 V
R1  R2 220k  56k
RTH  R1 R2  220k 56k  44.64 k
Problem 7

 The rest of the analysis: b. Calculate VB and VC:


VBE  VB  VE  0.7 VB  4.06  44.64kI B
ETH  VB 4.06  VB  4.06  44.64k (7.59 )
IB  
RTH 44.64k  3.72 V
VB  4.06  44.64kI B
VE  0 VE I C  I E  1.37 mA
I E  (   1) I B  
RE 2.2k VCC  VC
VE  398.2kI B IC 
RC
4.06  44.64kI B  398.2kI B  0.7 20  VC
1.37m 
 I B  7.59 A 6.8k
VC  10.68 V
I E  (   1) I B  (181)(7.59 )  1.37 mA
26 mV 26m
 re    18.98 
IE 1.37m
Problem 7

c. Determine Zi and Av = Vo / Vi:

Z i  R1 R2 re  220k 56k (180)(18.98)  3.17 k


Vo V
I b   o
ro RC
I b ro RC
Vo  
ro  RC
Vo I b ro RC 1 ro RC (50k )(6.8k )
Av       315.38
Vi ro  RC I b re re ro  RC  18.98(50k  6.8k )
Collector DC Feedback (CE: bypassed)

 A collector dc feedback configuration:


Collector DC Feedback (CE: bypassed)

 Its re model ac equivalent circuit:

 Zi & Zo can be easily obtained as the input & output are isolated:

Z i  RF1 re Z o  ro RF2 RC


Collector DC Feedback (CE: bypassed)

 For Av, Vi and Vo need to be examined first


– Vi: Vi  I b  re
– Vo: Vo  Vo Vo 
I b     
ro  R R 
 2 F C 
 RC  RF2 
  Vo
 RF RC 
 2 
ro RF2 RC  I b
Vo  
RF2 RC  ro RC  ro RF2
Vo ro RF2 RC I b 1 ro RF2 RC
Av    
Vi RF2 RC  ro RC  ro RF2 I b re 
re RF2 RC  ro RC  ro RF2 
Example 8

 For the network given, determine:


a. re
b. Zi
c. Z0
d. Av
Example 8

a. For DC analysis, RF1 and RF2 can be added together as RF or RB:


RB  RF1  RF2  120k  68k  188 k

VBE  VB  VE  VB  0  0.7,VB  0.7

V  VB VC  0.7 VCC  VC 12  VC
IB  C  I C  I B  
RB 188k RC 3k
VC  0.7  188kI B VC  12  420kI B

0.7  188kI B  12  420kI B  I E  (   1) I B  (141)(18.59 )  2.62 mA


 I B  18.59 A  re 
26 mV

26m
 9.92 
IE 2.62m
Example 8

b. The re model ac equivalent circuit:

Zi  RF1 || re  120k || 1.39k  1.37 k


c. For Z0:
Zo  ro || RF2 || RC || 30k || 68k || 3k  2.62 k
Example 8

 For Av: Vo  Vo Vo 
I b     
ro  RF RC 
 2 
 RC  RF2 
Vi  I b re   Vo
 RF RC 
 2 
ro RF2 RC  I b
Vo  
RF2 RC  ro RC  ro RF2

Vo ro RF2 RC I b 1 ro RF2 RC
Av    
Vi RF2 RC  ro RC  ro RF2 I b re 
re RF2 RC  ro RC  ro RF2 
(30k )(68k )(3k )
  264.33
9.92(68k )(3k )  (30k )(3k )  (30k )(68k ) 
Emitter-bias (CE: unbypassed)

 Emitter-bias configuration with RE unbypassed:

Notice there is no capacitor


to bypassed RE, so RE need
to be consider in the analysis
Emitter-bias (CE: unbypassed)

 The re model ac analysis circuit would be:

 In all CE unbypassed configuration, ro will be ignored to keep the analysis


simple
Emitter-bias (CE: unbypassed)

 To simplified the ac equivalent network


furthermore, it can be isolated from its input and
output terminal
 To do this Ie needs to become Ib and this can be
done by the equation Ie = (β+1)Ib ≈ βIb
 When Ie becomes Ib, the new RE would be:
Ve I b RE
new RE    RE
Ib Ib
Emitter-bias (CE: unbypassed)

 The simplified re model ac analysis circuit would be:


Emitter-bias (CE: unbypassed)

 The common parameters required (Zi, Zo and Av) can be easily obtained
using the same method as discussed before:

Z i  RB ||  re  RE  Vi  I b  re  RE 
Z o  RC  Vo  I b RC
Vo   I b RC

Vo  I b RC RC
Av   
Vi I b  re  RE  re  RE
Example 9

 For the network given, determine:


a. re
b. Zi
c. Z0
d. Av
Example 9

a. For re, apply DC analysis:


VBE  VB  VE  0.7 V
VCC  VB 20  VB
I E    1I B 
VE V
IB    E  121I B
RB 470k RE 0.56k
VB  20  470kI B VE  67.76kI B
20  470kI B  67.76kI B  0.7
 I B  35.89 A
I E  (   1) I B  (121)(35.89 )  4.34 mA
26 mV 26m
 re    5.99 
IE 4.34m
Example 9

b. The re model ac equivalent circuit would be:


Example 9

 The simplified re model ac equivalent circuit would be:

Z i  RB ||  re  RE   470k || 120(5.99  0.56k )  59.34 k


Example 9

c. For Zo: Z o  RC  2.2 k


d. For Av:
Vo  I b RC RC 2.2k
Av      3.89
Vi I b  re  RE  re  RE 5.99  0.56k
Problem 10

 For the network given:


a. Determine re
b. Find Zi and Av
Problem 10

 In this case, for DC analysis, the circuit will have two RE in series (RE =
RE1 + RE2 = 1.2k + 0.47k = 1.67 kΩ)
 For AC analysis, only one RE will be considered as for RE2 is bypassed by
capacitor CE (RE = RE1 = 0.47kΩ)
V  VB 22  VB
I E    1I B  E  E  81I B
V V
I B  CC 
RB 330k RE 1.67k
VB  22  330kI B VE  135.27kI B
VBE  VB  VB  0.7
22  330kI B  135.27kI B  0.7
 I B  45.78 A
I E  (   1) I B  (81)(45.78 )  3.71 mA
26 mV 26m
 re    7.01 
IE 3.71m
Problem 10

 The simplified re model ac equivalent circuit would be:

Z i  RB ||  re  RE 
 330k || 80(7.01  1.2k )
 74.70 k

Vo  I b RC RC 5.6k
Av      4.64
Vi I b  re  RE  re  RE 7.01 1.2k
Voltage-Divider Bias (CE: unbypassed)

 The circuit would be the same as any voltage-divider bias circuit except
for RE will not be bypassed by any capacitor
Voltage-Divider Bias (CE: unbypassed)

 The simplified re model ac equivalent circuit will be same as in emitter-


bias circuit with an addition of R2 at input

R1 R2
Voltage-Divider Bias (CE: unbypassed)

 By examining the simplified re model ac equivalent circuit, only the input


impedance is change while the output impedance and voltage gain remains
the same

Zi  R1 || R2 ||  re  RE 
Z o  RC

Vo  I b RC RC
Av   
Vi I b  re  RE  re  RE
Example 11

 For the network given, determine:


a. re
b. Zi
c. Z0
d. Av
Example 11

RE  10R2 Z i  R1 || R2 ||  re  RE 


(210)(0.68k )  (10)(10k )  90k || 10k || 210(19.64  0.68k )
142.8k  100k (satisfied)  8.48 k
R2 10k
VB  VCC  (16)  1.6 V
R1  R2 90k  10k Z o  RC  2.2 k
VBE  VB  VE  0.7
VE  VB  VBE  1.6  0.7  0.9
Vo  I b RC
VE  0 0.9 Av  
IE    1.32 mA Vi I b  re  RE 
RE 0.68k
RC 2.2k
 re 
26 mV 26m
  19.64   
IE 1.32m re  RE 19.64  0.68k
 3.14
Emitter-Follower (CE: unbypassed)

 Emitter-Follower circuit is very


different from the other CE
unbypassed circuit
 Notice that the absent of RC
while Vo and Io are taken at the
emitter leg
 Emitter-follower means that the
magnitude and value of Vo
“follows” the magnitude and
value of Vi
 As for that the voltage gain will
approximately have the value
of 1 (Av ≈ 1)
Emitter-Follower (CE: unbypassed)

 The re model ac equivalent would be:

Notice that input


and output are
not isolated.
And output is
taken within the
input elements.
Emitter-Follower (CE: unbypassed)

 For input:
– Apply the same simplified
re model ac equivalent
circuit as in other CE
unbypassed circuit
– Zi will be:

Z i  RB ||  re  RE 
Emitter-Follower (CE: unbypassed)

 For output:
– Consider again the re model ac equivalent circuit
– For the output purpose, Ie will be put into consideration rather than Ib
because IE is the output current
– The resistor βre needs to reconfigured due to the change of Ib to Ie
 Consider the voltage across βre namely Vβre:
I e re I e  re
Vre  I b  re    I e re
 1 
 As for that, the new βre will be:

Vre I e re
new re    re
Ie Ie
Emitter-Follower (CE: unbypassed)

 The simplified re model ac


equivalent circuit (for output):
 For Zo, set Vi = 0
 RB will be bypassed when Vi =
0 Ie

 By looking from Zo, the resistor


RE and re will be in parallel

Z o  RE || re
Emitter-Follower (CE: unbypassed)

 For Av, consider back the re


model ac equivalent
 By applying nodal analysis at
node Vo:
I e  I b  I b
Vo  0 Vi  Vo Vi  Vo
 
RE re re
reVo  REVi  REVo  REVi  REVo
re  RE   1Vo  RE   1Vi
Vo RE RE
 Av   
Vi  re  RE  re  RE
Example 12

 For the emitter follower network given, determine:


a. re
b. Zi
c. Z0
d. Av
Example 12

a. For re, apply DC analysis:


VBE  VB  VE  0.7 V
VCC  VB 12  VB
I E    1I B 
VE V
IB    E  101I B
RB 220k RE 3.3k
VB  12  220kI B VE  333.3kI B
12  220kI B  333.3kI B  0.7
 I B  20.42 A
I E  (   1) I B  (101)(20.42 )  2.06 mA
26 mV 26m
 re    12.60 
IE 2.06m
Example 12

 The re model ac equivalent circuit would be:


Example 12

b. For Zi, apply the simplified re model ac equivalent circuit (for input):

Z i  RB ||  re  RE 
 220k || 10012.6  3.3k 
 132.20 k
Example 12

c. For Zo, apply the simplified re model ac equivalent circuit (for output):

Ie

Z o  RE || re
 3.3k || 12.6
 12.55 
Example 12

d. For Av, apply the re model ac  Then, apply nodal analysis at


equivalent circuit: node V0:
I e  I b  I b
Vo  0 Vi  Vo Vi  Vo
 
RE re re
reVo  REVi  REVo  REVi  REVo
re  RE   1Vo  RE   1Vi
Vo RE RE
 Av   
Vi  re  RE  re  RE
3.3k
  0.996
12.6  3.3k
Problem 13

 For the network given:


a. Determine Zi and Z0
b. Find Av
c. Calculate V0 if Vi = 1 mV
Problem 13

 Start the analysis with DC analysis to find re:


VBE  VB  VE  0.7 V
0  VB  VB VE  (8) VE  8
IB   I E    1I B    121I B
RB 390k RE 5.6k
VB  390kI B VE  677.6kI B  8
 390kI B  677.6kI B  8  0.7
 I B  6.84 A
I E  (   1) I B  (121)(6.84 )  0.83 mA
26 mV 26m
 re    31.42 
IE 0.83m
Problem 13

 The re model ac equivalent circuit would be:


Problem 13

a. For Zi, apply the simplified re model ac equivalent circuit (for input):

Z i  RB ||  re  RE 
 390k || 12031.42  5.6k 
 247.29 k
Problem 13

 For Zo, apply the simplified re model ac equivalent circuit (for output):

Ie

Z o  RE || re
 5.6k || 31.42
 31.25 
Problem 13

b. For Av, apply the re model ac  Then, apply nodal analysis at


equivalent circuit: node V0:
I e  I b  I b
Vo  0 Vi  Vo Vi  Vo
 
RE re re
reVo  REVi  REVo  REVi  REVo
re  RE   1Vo  RE   1Vi
Vo RE RE
 Av   
Vi  re  RE  re  RE
5.6k
  0.994
31.42  5.6k
Problem 13

c. If Vi = 1 mV:
Vo
Av   0.994
Vi
Vo  0.994Vi  0.994(1m)  0.994 mV
Common-Base Configuration

 Usually, in a common-base configuration, a pnp transistor will be


used rather than npn
 Also, in a common-base configuration, α is given instead of β
Common-Base Configuration

 The same steps to transform the circuit into its ac equivalent circuit is
taken just like in all the CE bypassed and unbypassed configuration,
resulting in:
Common-Base Configuration

 By examining the input, RE and re are connected in parallel:

Z i  RE || re
 When examine the output, the only impedance appeared is RC:
Z o  RC
 And for its voltage gain:

Vo I e RC RC
Av   
Vi I e re re
Example 14

 For the network given, determine:


a. re
b. Zi
c. Z0
d. Av
Example 14

a. For determining re, DC analysis will be conduct

VEB  VE  VB  0.7
VB  0
VE  VEB  VB  0.7  0  0.7

(2)  VE 2  0.7
IE    1.3 mA
RE 1k

26 mV 26m
 re    20 
IE 1.3m
Example 14

b. Transform the circuit into its re model ac equivalent circuit:

Z i  RE || re  1k || 20  19.61 
c. For Zo: Z o  RC  5 k
Example 14

d. For its voltage gain:


Vo I e RC RC (0.98)(5k )
Av      245
Vi I e re re 20
Problem 15

 For the common-base configuration given:


a. Determine re
b. Find Zi and Z0
c. Calculate Av
Problem 15

a. For determining re, DC analysis will be conduct

VEB  VE  VB  0.7
VB  0
VE  VEB  VB  0.7  0  0.7

(6)  VE 6  0.7
IE    0.78 mA
RE 6.8k

26 mV 26m
 re    33.36 
IE 0.78m
Problem 15

b. Transform the circuit into its re model ac equivalent circuit:

Z i  RE || re  6.8k || 33.36  33.20 


Z o  RC  4.7 k
Problem 15

d. For its voltage gain:

Vo I e RC RC (0.998)(4.7k )
Av      140.61
Vi I e re re 33.36
AC Analysis Hints and Tips

 For CE configuration, usually npn transistor is used


(β is given) while in CB configuration, a pnp
transistor is usually used (α is given)
 Memorize the CE and CB device’s re model ac
equivalent circuit
 For CE unbypassed and CB circuit, assume that ro =
∞Ω

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