Transistor - GTU E
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Transcript Transistor - GTU E
G.K.BHARAD INSTITUTE OF ENGINEERING
TRANSISTOR
DIVISION
Roll Number
SUBJECT
SUBJECT CODE
:D (C.E.)
:67
:PHYSICS
:2110011
Presentation By:
Kartavya Parmar
About Transistor
• The transistor, invented by three scientists at the Bell
Laboratories in 1947, rapidly replaced the vacuum tube
as an electronic signal regulator.
• A transistor regulates current or voltage flow and acts as
a switch or gate for electronic signals. A transistor
consists of three layers of a semiconductor material, each
capable of carrying a current.
• A semiconductor is a material such as germanium and
silicon that conducts electricity in a "semi-enthusiastic"
way. It's somewhere between a real conductor such as
copper and an insulator.
• The semiconductor material is given special properties by
a chemical process called doping.
• The doping results in a material that either adds extra
electrons to the material which is then called N-type for
the extra negative charge carriers or creates "holes" in
the material's crystal structure which is then called Ptype because it results in more positive charge carriers.
• The transistor's three-layer structure contains an N-type
semiconductor layer sandwiched between P-type layers a
PNP configuration or a P-type layer between N-type
layers an NPN configuration.
• A small change in the current or voltage at the inner semiconductor
layer which acts as the control electrode produces a large, rapid
change in the current passing through the entire component. The
component can thus act as a switch, opening and closing an
electronic gate many times per second.
• Today's computers use circuitry made with complementary metal
oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology. CMOS uses two
complementary transistors per gate. When one transistor is
maintaining a logic state, it requires almost no power.
• Transistors are the basic elements in integrated circuits (ICs), which
consist of very large numbers of transistors interconnected with
circuitry and baked into a single silicon microchip or "chip."
Types of Transistor
• The transistor is an arrangement of semiconductor
materials that share common physical boundaries.
Materials most commonly used are silicon, galliumarsenide, and germanium, into which impurities have
been introduced by a process called "doping.“
• In n -type semiconductors the impurities or do pants
result in an excess of electrons, or negative charges; in p type semiconductors the do pants lead to a deficiency of
electrons and therefore an excess of positive charge
carriers or "holes."
The Junction Transistor
• The n-p-n junction transistor consists of two n -type semiconductors
separated by a thin layer of p -type semiconductor. The transistor action
is such that if the electric potentials on the segments are properly
determined, a small current between the base and emitter connections
results in a large current between the emitter and collector connections,
thus producing current amplification.
• Some circuits are designed to use the transistor as a switching device;
current in the base-emitter junction creates a low-resistance path
between the collector and emitter. The p-n-p junction transistor,
consisting of a thin layer of n -type semiconductor lying between two p type semiconductors, works in the same manner, except that all polarities
are reversed.
The Field-Effect Transistor
• A very important type of transistor developed after the junction transistor is the field-effect transistor
(FET). It draws virtually no power from an input signal, overcoming a major disadvantage of the
junction transistor. An n -channel FET consists of a bar (channel) of n -type semiconductor material
that passes between and makes contact with two small regions of p -type material near its center. The
terminals attached to the ends of the channel are called the source and the drain; those attached to
the two p -type regions are called gates.
• A voltage applied to the gates is directed so that no current exists across the junctions between the p
- and n -type materials; for this reason it is called a reverse voltage. Variations of the magnitude of the
reverse voltage cause variations in the resistance of the channel, enabling the reverse voltage to
control the current in the channel. A p -channel device works the same way but with all polarities
reversed. The metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) is a variant in which a single
gate is separated from the channel by a layer of metal oxide, which acts as an insulator, or dielectric.
The electric field of the gate extends through the dielectric and controls the resistance of the channel.
In this device the input signal, which is applied to the gate, can increase the current through the
channel as well as decrease it.
Advantages and Disadvantages of
Transistor
Advantages of Transistor
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Immediate functioning, no time for heating necessary.
Minimal losses and hardly any development of heat.
Smaller measurements and low weight.
Smaller mechanical sensitivity.
Fast switching.
Lower supply voltage.
Low susceptibility to trouble and long lifetime.
Disadvantages of Transistor
• When they blow, they need to be replaced BUT they are so small
(that an advantage) it can be difficult to find the offending transistor.
• Manufacturing techniques are complex.
• Manufacturing techniques require clean rooms.
• They can be put into the circuit board the wrong way and therefore
not work.
• Removing them from a circuit board involves unsoldering whereas
valves were plugged.
• If they are on an integrated circuit and blow, the ENTIRE integrated
circuit must be replaced.
Application of Transistor
Transistor as an Amplifier
• A transistor can be used to amplify current. This is because a small change in base current
causes a large change in collector current.
• Example is a microphone.
• Sound waves that are fed into the microphone cause the diaphragm in the microphone to
vibrate.
• The electrical output of the microphone changes according to the sound waves.
• As a result, the base current is varying because of the small alternating voltage produced
by the microphone.
• A small change in the base current causes a large change in the collector current.
• The varying collector current flows into the loudspeaker. There, it is changed into the
sound waves corresponding to the original sound waves.
• The frequencies of both waves are equivalent but the amplitude of the sound wave from
the loudspeaker is higher than the sound waves fed into the microphone.
Transistor as Switch
• In a transistor, no current can flow in the collector circuit unless
a current flows in the base circuit. This property allows a
transistor to be used as switch.
• The transistor can be turned on or off by changing the base.
• There are a few types of switching circuits operated by
transistors.
1. Light-Operated Switch.
2. Heat-Operated Switch.