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Lecture K • No lectures on Thursdays anymore! Yeah! • Mid-term in ~3 weeks. Covers all materials we covered up that date (lectures and labs) • Start thinking about your final projects! (Proposal due in 5 weeks)
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Lecture K

Feb 25, 2016

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Lecture K. No lectures on Thursdays anymore! Yeah! Mid-term in ~3 weeks. Covers all materials we covered up that date (lectures and labs) Start thinking about your final projects! (Proposal due in 5 weeks). Our Trusty LF356 contains about a dozen transistors (BJTs and FETs). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Lecture K

Lecture K

• No lectures on Thursdays anymore! Yeah!

• Mid-term in ~3 weeks. Covers all materials we covered up that date (lectures and labs)

• Start thinking about your final projects! (Proposal due in 5 weeks)

Page 2: Lecture K

Our Trusty LF356 contains about a dozen transistors (BJTs and FETs)

Page 3: Lecture K

Modern CPUs and GPUs contain well over 1 billion transistors. Some memory chips even several 10 billions (mostly FETs)!

(Sorry. No circuit diagram for this one…)

Page 4: Lecture K

Moore’s Law

Curve shows ‘Moore’s Law’:Transistor count doubling every two years

Page 5: Lecture K
Page 6: Lecture K

Analogy of current in n and p-doped semiconductors

Ener

gy

Momentum

n-doped

p-doped

un-doped(“intrinsic”)

Electrons carry the current.

“Holes” carry the current.

Traffic jam! Current cannot flow.

Page 7: Lecture K
Page 8: Lecture K

Based on the VCE vs. IC plot on the board, what is the current gain hfe?

L1

A) 1B) 10C) 100D) 200E) 1000

Page 9: Lecture K

What is Vout for an emitter follower?

L2

A) IB RE

B) Vin

C) 10 V - 0.6 VD) Vin + 0.6 VE) Vin – 0.6 V

Page 10: Lecture K
Page 11: Lecture K

What is Vout for a common emitter amplifier?

L5

A) Vcc- hfe RC IB

B) Vin - hfe RC IB

C) Vcc- RC IB

D) Vin - RC IB

E) I donno.

Page 12: Lecture K
Page 13: Lecture K

21

For the (properly biased) input voltage signal shown below, which of the following choices best represents the output voltage signal for the circuit at right?

Page 14: Lecture K

22

Vin is a 1 kHz signal with peak-to-peak amplitude of 1 V.

A) A > B > C

B) B > A > C

C) B > C > A

D) B > A = C

E) C > A > B

Rank the three circuits according to the peak-to-peak amplitude of Vout.

Page 15: Lecture K

23

For Vin as shown, rank outputs 1, 2, and 3 according to peak-to-peak amplitude from largest to smallest

A) 1 > 2 > 3

B) 1 > 2 = 3

C) 2 = 3 > 1

D) 2 > 3 > 1

E) 3 > 2 = 1

Page 16: Lecture K

24

Suppose a 1-kΩ resistor is added to the circuit as shown at right.

A) Increase

B) Decrease

C) Remain the same

D) Not enough information

When the resistor is added, the peak-to-peak amplitude of output 1 (for the same input signal) will:

Page 17: Lecture K

25

Vin is a 1 kHz signal with peak-to-peak amplitude of 1 V.

A)A > B > C

B)B > A > C

C)B > C > A

D)B > A = C

E)C > A > B

Rank the three circuits according to the peak-to-peak amplitude of Vout.

Page 18: Lecture K