Question 6.13: Given the circuit of Figure 6.30, assume the following compo...
Given the circuit of Figure 6.30, assume the following component values: R_1 = 20 kΩ, R_2 = 100 kΩ, R_C = 50 Ω, and R_E = 100 Ω, the supply is V_{CC} = 10 V. (1) Calculate I_C, I_B, V_{CE},V_{RE}, and β. (2) Also calculate for the found value of β the BJT trans-conductance g_m and r_π of the hybrid-π small signal model. At all times ignore the BJT Early effect; that is, r_0 → ∞. Assume the reverse saturation current I_S = 7.11 × 10^{−15} A at room temperature of 300 K and V_{BE} = 0.763 V.
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From Equation (6.16), repeated here for the reader’s convenience, we find for I_S = 7.11 × 10^{−15} A, v_{BE} = 0.763 V, and v_T = 0.026 V that
I_C=I_Se^{\frac{v_{BE}}{v_T} }=39.5 mA (6.78)
Using the above given values in the circuit of Figure 6.30, and applying Thèvenin to the resistor divider on the left of the BJT base node, we obtain
R_{Thev}=\frac{R_1R_2}{R_1+R_2} ;V_{Thev}=\frac{R_2}{R_1+R_2} V_{CC}. (6.79)
Equations (6.79) were obtained just as Equations (6.32) and (6.33) were obtained, using the resistor divider method. For the Thevenized portion of the circuit we can write KVL equations, to find the base current:
R_{Thev}=\frac{R_1R_2}{R_1+R_2} (6.32)
V_{Thev}=\frac{R_2}{R_1+R_2} V_{CC} (6.33)
I_B=(V_{Thev}-V_{BE}-V_E)/R_{Thev} (6.80)
where V_{Thev} = 8.33 V and R_{Thev} = 16,667 Ω are calculated from Equations (6.79) using the given values of R_1, R_2, and V_{CC}. Voltage V_E is the voltage drop across resistor R_E. This voltage is approximately equal to I_C R_E; a more exact value is I_E R_E. Since I_C ≈ I_E, the error in the approximation is small, because I_C + I_B = I_E, and the value of base current is quite small. Using the value of I_C = 39.5 mA, we get that
V_E\approx I_CR_E=0.0395\times 100=3.95 V
Plugging the value of V_E = 3.95 V into Equation (6.80) we obtain: I_B = 217 µA. Since we calculated the collector current I_C and base current I_B, β = I_C/I_B = 182. Referring one more time to the circuit of Figure 6.30 we can see that the collector-emitter voltage:
V_{CE}=V_{CC}-I_{C}R_C-V_E
Plugging the corresponding values, we obtain that
V_{CE}=10-(0.0395\times 50)-3.95=4.08 V
For part b of this example, since g_m = I_C/V_T and r_π = β/g_m, we obtain that
g_m=1.52 S and r_π=119 Ω
The results for part (a) are regrouped and presented here:
I_C=39.5 mA
I_B=217 µA
V_{CE}=4.08 V
V_{RE}=3.95 V and
β=182
and for part b):
g_m=1.52 S
and
r_π=119 Ω.
