Top Banner
Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013
40
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

TransistorsCamille CruzChase ThompsonTyler Nelson

September 26, 2013

Page 2: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Outline•Introduction•Transistors Types•Bipolar Junction Transistors•Field Effect Transistors•Power Transistors•Example

Page 3: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

What is a Transistor?

Page 4: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Transistors

Different types and sizes

BJT (PNP) Electrical Diagram

First TransistorModern Electronics

FET and BJT Transistor

Page 5: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

•Purpose▫To amplify and switch electronic signals on

or off (high or low)

•Modern Electronics

Microprocessor

Cell Phones

Motor Controllers

Page 6: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Vacuum tubes•Purpose

▫Used as signal amplifiers and switches▫Advantages

High power and frequency operation Operation at higher voltages Less vulnerable to electromagnetic pulses

▫Disadvantages Very large and fragile Energy inefficient Expensive

Page 7: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Invention• Evolution of electronics

▫ In need of a device that was small, robust, reliable, energy efficient and cheap to manufacture

• 1947▫ John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William

Schockly invented transistor• Transistor Effect

▫“when electrical contacts were applied to a crystal of germanium, the output power was larger than the input.”

Page 8: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

General Applications

Page 9: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Doping •Process of introducing impure elements

(dopants) into semiconductor wafers to form regions of differing electrical conductivity

Negatively charged Semiconductor

Positively charged semiconductor

Page 10: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Doping Effects

•P-type semiconductors▫Created positive charges, where electrons

have been removed, in lattice structure•N-type semiconductors

▫Added unbound electrons create negative charge in lattice structure

•Resulting material▫P-N junction

Page 11: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

P-N junction

Forward BiasingReverse Biasing

Page 12: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

•P-N junction▫Controls current flow via external voltage

•Two P-N junctions (bipolar junction transistor, BJT)▫Controls current flow and amplifies the

current flow

Page 13: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Transistor Categories

•Semiconductor material•Structure•Polarity•Maximum power rating•Maximum operating frequency•Application•Physical packaging•Amplification factor

Page 14: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Types of Transistors•Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT)

•Field Effect Transistors (FET)

•Power Transistors

Page 15: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.
Page 16: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT Introduction

• Bipolar Junction Transistors (BJT) consists of three “sandwiched” semiconductor layers

• The three layers are connected to collector (C), emitter (E), and base (B) pins

• Current supplied to the base controls the amount of current that flows through the collector and emitter

Page 17: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT Schematic•NPN

▫BE forward bias

▫BC reverse bias

•PNP▫BE reverse

bias▫BC forward

bias

NPN

PNP

Page 18: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT Characteristic Curves

Transfer Characteristic• Characteristic curves can be drawn to show other useful

parameters of the transistor• The slope of ICE / IBE  is called the Transfer Characteristic (β)

Page 19: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT Characteristic CurvesInput Characteristic• The Input Characteristic is the base emitter current

IBE against base emitter voltage VBE

• IBE/VBE shows the input Conductance of the transistor.

• The increase in slope of when the VBE is above 1 volt shows that the input conductance is rising

• There is a large increase in current for a very small increase in VBE.

Page 20: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT Characteristic CurvesOutput Characteristic• collector current (IC) is nearly independent of the collector-

emitter voltage (VCE), and instead depends on the base current (IB)

IB1

IB2

IB3

IB4

Page 21: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT Operating Regions

Operating Region

Parameters Mode

Cut OffVBE < Vcut-in VCE > Vsupply

IB = IC = 0Switch OFF

LinearVBE = Vcut-in

Vsat < VCE < Vsupply

IC = β*IB

Amplification

Saturated

VBE = Vcut-in,VCE < Vsat

IB > IC,max, IC,max > 0

Switch ON

Page 22: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT ApplicationsBJT Switch• Offer lower cost and substantial reliability over

conventional mechanical relays. • Transistor operates purely in a saturated or cutoff state

(on/off)• This can prove very useful for digital applications (small

current controls a larger current)

Page 23: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT ApplicationsBJT Amplifier

Page 24: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

BJT ApplicationsBJT Amplifier

Page 25: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Field Effect Transistors (FET)

Chase Thompson

Page 26: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

FET Basics

•Electric Field

•Voltage Controlled

•FET includes three distinct pieces▫Drain▫Source▫Gate

Page 27: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

FET versus BJT?Same:• Applications: amplifier,

switch, etc.• Relies on PNP or NPN

junctions to allow current flow

Difference:• Voltage vs Current Input• Unipolar vs Bipolar• Noise• Higher input impedance• Fragile and low gain

bandwidth

Page 28: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Types of Field-Effect Transistors

Type Function

Junction Field-Effect Transistor (JFET) Uses reversed biased p-n junction to separate gate from body

Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor FET (MOSFET) Uses insulator (usu. SiO2) between gate and body

Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor (IGBT) Similar to MOSFET, but different main channel

Organic Field-Effect Transistor (OFET) Uses organic semiconductor in its channel

Nanoparticle Organic Memory FET (NOMFET) Combines the organic transistor and gold nanoparticles

Page 29: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

JFET• Reverse Biased PN-

junction• Depletion mode

devices▫Creates a potential

gradient to restrict current flow. (Increases overall resistance)

http://www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/mmg/teaching/linearcircuits/jfet.html

Page 30: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

JFET• N-channel JFET

• P-channel JFET uses same principles but▫Channel current is positive due to holes instead

of electron donors▫Polarity of biasing voltage must be reversed

Page 31: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

N-Type Characteristics

Page 32: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Characteristics and Applications of FETs

JFETs

• Simplest type of FET – easy to make

• High input impedance and resistance

• Low Capacitance• Slower speed in switching• Uses?

– Displacement sensor– High input impedance

amplifier– Low-noise amplifier– Analog switch– Voltage controlled resistor

Page 33: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

MOSFET

•Similar to JFET ▫ A single channel of single doped SC

material with terminals at end▫ Gate surrounds channel with doping

that is opposite of the channel, making the PNP or NPN type

▫ BUT, the MOSFET uses an insulator to separate gate from body, while JFET uses a reverse-bias p-n junction

p-channel

n-channel

MOSFETenhanced mode

MOSFETdepleted mode

Page 34: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

How does a MOSFET work?

Simplified Notation

No current flow “Short” allows current flow

No Voltage to Gate Voltage to Gate

Source Source DrainDrain

n n

Page 35: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

MOSFETTriode Mode/Linear Region VGS > Vth and VDS < ( VGS - Vth )

VGS : Voltage at the gateVth : Threshold voltageVDS : Voltage from drain to sourceμn: charge-carrier effective mobilityW: gate width L: gate length Cox : gate oxide capacitance per unit areaλ : channel-length modulation parameter

Saturation/Active Mode

VGS > Vth and VDS > ( VGS - Vth )

Page 36: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Characteristics and Applications of FETs

MOSFETs

• Oxide layer prevents DC current from flowing through gate• Reduces power consumption• High input impedance

• Rapid switching• More noise than JFET• Uses?

• Again, switches and amplifiers in general

• The MOSFET is used in digital CMOS logic, which uses p- and n-channel MOSFETs as building blocks

• To aid in negating effects that cause discharge of batteries

Use of MOSFET in battery protection circuit

Page 37: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Power Transistors Concerned with delivering high power Used in high voltage and high current application

In generalFabrication process different in order to: Dissipate more heat Avoid breakdown

Different types: Power BJTs, power MOSFETS, etc.

Page 38: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Comparison

Property

BJT MOSFET

JFET

Gm Best Worst Medium

Speed High Medium Low

Noise Moderate

Worst Best

Good Switch

No Yes Yes

High-Z Gate

No Yes Yes

ESD Sensitivity

Less More Less

Page 39: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

References (32)1. http://www.utdallas.edu/research/cleanroom/TystarFurnace.htm2. http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/semiconductors/definitions.html3. http://www.products.cvdequipment.com/applications/diffusion/1/4. http://amath.colorado.edu/index.php?page=an-immersed-interface-method-for-modeling-semiconductor-d

evices5. http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,2845,1938467,00.asp6. http://macao.communications.museum/eng/Exhibition/secondfloor/moreinfo/2_10_3_HowTransistorWorks.

html7. http://fourier.eng.hmc.edu/e84/lectures/ch4/node3.html8. http://www.appliedmaterials.com/htmat/animated.html 9. http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/solids/dope.html#c310. http://www.tpub.com/neets/book7/25.htm11. http://esminfo.prenhall.com/engineering/wakerlyinfo/samples/BJT.pdf12. http://web.engr.oregonstate.edu/~traylor/ece112/lectures/bjt_reg_of_op.pdf13. http://www.me.gatech.edu/mechatronics_course/transistors_F09.ppt14. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bipolar_junction_transistor15. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_emitter16. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diode17. http://www.kpsec.freeuk.com/trancirc.htm18. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field-effect_transistor19. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JFET20. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOSFET21. http://www.slideshare.net/guest3b5d8a/fets22. http://www.rhopointcomponents.com/images/jfetapps.pdf23. http://cnx.org/content/m1030/latest/24. http://www.play-hookey.com/semiconductors/enhancement_mode_mosfet.html25. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aHnmHwa_6I&feature=related26. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7J_snw0Eng&feature=related27. http://info.tuwien.ac.at/theochem/si-srtio3_interface/si-srtio3.html28. http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/solids/dope.html#c429. http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blsolar5.htm30. http://thalia.spec.gmu.edu/~pparis/classes/notes_101/node100.html31. http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/solids/pnjun.html#c332. http://science.jrank.org/pages/6925/Transistor.html

Page 40: Transistors Camille Cruz Chase Thompson Tyler Nelson September 26, 2013.

Questions?