PHYSICS Project File Class 12
PHYSICS Project File Class 12
INTRODUCTION
A transistor is
a semiconductor
device used
to amplify and switch electronic signals and electrical power. It is
composed of semiconductor material with at least three terminals for
connection to an external circuit. A voltage or current applied to one
pair of the transistor's terminals changes the current through another
pair of terminals. Because the controlled (output) power can be higher
than the controlling (input) power, a transistor can amplify a signal.
Today, some transistors are packaged individually, but many more
are found embedded in integrated circuits.
The transistor is the fundamental building block of modern electronic
devices, and is ubiquitous in modern electronic systems. Following its
development in 1947 by American physicists John Bardeen, Walter
Brattain, and William Shockley, the transistor revolutionized the field
of electronics, and paved the way for smaller and
cheaperradios, calculators, and computers, among other things. The
transistor is on the list ofIEEE milestones in electronics, and the
inventors were jointly awarded the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics for
their achievement.
The thermionic triode, a vacuum tube invented in 1907, propelled
long-distancetelephony. The triode, however, was a fragile device that
consumed a lot of power. Physicist Julius Edgar Lilienfeld filed a
patent for a field-effect transistor(FET) in Canada in 1925, which was
intended to be a solid-state replacement for the triode.[1][2] Lilienfeld
also filed identical patents in the United States in 1926[3] and
1928.[4][5] However, Lilienfeld did not publish any research articles
about his devices nor did his patents cite any specific examples of a
German radar effort during World War II. Using this knowledge, he
began researching the phenomenon of "interference" in 1947. By
witnessing currents flowing through point-contacts, similar to what
Bardeen and Brattain had accomplished earlier in December 1947,
Matar by June 1948, was able to produce consistent results by using
samples of germanium produced by Welker. Realizing that Bell Labs'
scientists had already invented the transistor before them, the
company rushed to get its "transistron" into production for amplified
use in France's telephone network.[13]
Labs.[23] The first MOS transistor actually built was by Kahng and
Atalla at Bell Labs in 1960.[24]
Importance
transistors were built in 2002 ... for [each] man, woman, and child
on Earth."[29]
The transistor's low cost, flexibility, and reliability have made it a
ubiquitous device. Transistorized mechatronic circuits have
replaced electromechanical devices in controlling appliances and
machinery. It is often easier and cheaper to use a
standard microcontroller and write a computer program to carry
out a control function than to design an equivalent mechanical
control function.
Simplified operation
few
Limitations
Types
PNP
P-channel
NPN
N-channel
BJT
JFET
P-channel
N-channel
JFET
MOSFET enh
MOSFET dep
Thus, a particular transistor may be described as silicon, surfacemount, BJT, npn, low-power, high-frequency switch.
leave the base, the number of electrons entering the collector can
be controlled.[35] Collector current is approximately (commonemitter current gain) times the base current. It is typically greater
than 100 for small-signal transistors but can be smaller in
transistors designed for high-power applications.
Unlike the field-effect transistor (see below), the BJT is a low
input-impedance device. Also, as the baseemitter voltage (Vbe) is
increased the baseemitter current and hence the collector
emitter current (Ice) increase exponentially according to
the Shockley diode model and the Ebers-Moll model. Because of
this
exponential
relationship,
the
BJT
has
a
higher transconductance than the FET.
Bipolar transistors can be made to conduct by exposure to light,
because absorption of photons in the base region generates a
photocurrent that acts as a base current; the collector current is
approximately times the photocurrent. Devices designed for this
purpose have a transparent window in the package and are
called phototransistors.
positive gate voltage corresponds to a higher current for nchannel devices and a lower current for p-channel devices. Nearly
all JFETs are depletion-mode because the diode junctions would
forward bias and conduct if they were enhancement-mode
devices; most IGFETs are enhancement-mode types.
Usage of bipolar and field-effect transistor
Prefix
Type of transistor
2SA
2SB
2SC
2SD
2SJ
2SK
Prefix
class
AC
AC126
NTE102A
Datasheet
AD
AD133
NTE179
Datasheet
AF
AF117
NTE160
Datasheet
AL
ALZ10
NTE100
Datasheet
AS
ASY28
NTE101
Datasheet
AU
AU103
NTE127
Datasheet
BC
BC548
2N3904
Datasheet
BD
BD139
NTE375
Datasheet
BF
BF245
NTE133
Datasheet
BS
BS170
2N7000
Datasheet
BL
BU
CF
CL
BLW60
NTE325
BU2520A NTE2354
Datasheet
Datasheet
CF739
Datasheet
CLY10
Datasheet
Proprietary
2N2
222A in a plastic case (but a PN108 is a plastic version of a
BC108, not a 2N108, while the PN100 is unrelated to other xx100
devices).
Military part numbers sometimes are assigned their own codes,
such as the British Military CV Naming System.
Manufacturers buying large numbers of similar parts may have
them supplied with "house numbers", identifying a particular
purchasing specification and not necessarily a device with a
standardized registered number. For example, an HP part
1854,0053 is a (JEDEC) 2N2218 transistor[46][47] which is also
assigned the CV number: CV7763[48]
Naming problems
Semiconductor
Junction forward
voltage
material
V @ 25 C
Electron mobility
Hole mobility
m2/(Vs) @ 25 C m2/(Vs) @ 25 C
Max.
junction temp.
C
Ge
0.27
0.39
0.19
70 to 100
Si
0.71
0.14
0.05
150 to 200
GaAs
1.03
0.85
0.05
150 to 200
150 to 200
Construction
The first BJTs were made from germanium(Ge). Silicon (Si) types
currently predominate but certain advanced microwave and highperformance
versions
now
employ
thecompound
semiconductor materialgallium
arsenide (GaAs)
and
the semiconductor alloy silicon germanium (SiGe). Single element
semiconductor material (Ge and Si) is described as elemental.
Rough parameters for the most common semiconductor materials
used to make transistors are given in the table to the right; these
parameters will vary with increase in temperature, electric field,
impurity level, strain, and sundry other factors.
The junction forward voltage is the voltage applied to the emitter
base junction of a BJT in order to make the base conduct a
specified current. The current increases exponentially as the
junction forward voltage is increased. The values given in the
Because the electron mobility is higher than the hole mobility for
all
semiconductor
materials,
a
given
bipolar npn
transistor tends to be swifter than an equivalent pnp transistor.
GaAs has the highest electron mobility of the three
semiconductors. It is for this reason that GaAs is used in highfrequency applications. A relatively recent FET development,
the high-electron-mobility
transistor (HEMT),
has
a heterostructure (junction between different semiconductor
materials) of aluminium gallium arsenide (AlGaAs)-gallium
arsenide (GaAs) which has twice the electron mobility of a GaAsmetal barrier junction. Because of their high speed and low noise,
HEMTs are used in satellite receivers working at frequencies
around 12 GHz. HEMTs based on gallium nitride and aluminium
gallium nitride (AlGaN/GaN HEMTs) provide a still higher electron
mobility and are being developed for various applications.
Max. junction temperature values represent a cross section
taken from various manufacturers' data sheets. This temperature
should not be exceeded or the transistor may be damaged.
AlSi junction refers to the high-speed (aluminumsilicon)
metalsemiconductor barrier diode, commonly known as
aSchottky diode. This is included in the table because some
silicon power IGFETs have a parasitic reverse Schottky diode
formed between the source and drain as part of the fabrication
process. This diode can be a nuisance, but sometimes it is used
in the circuit.
Packaging
This time, however, its the Americans under fire for falsifying
history and the subject is the invention of the transistor. The
received wisdom is that William Shockley, John Bardeen, and
Walter Brattain invented this device in 1947 and of that there can
surely be no doubt. But there is and the colourful claims and
counterclaims make some fascinating reading.
leading the research, knew at once that this was not what he was
seeking: at the time he was trying to create a solid-state device
similar to what we now call a junction field-effect transistor.
Bell Labs kept their discovery quiet until June 1948 (hence the
confusion about the date of discovery). They then announced it in
a fanfare of publicity, but few people realised its significance, and
it did not even make the front page of the newspapers. Shockley
basically ignored the point-contact transistor, and continued his
research in other directions. He modified his original ideas and
developed the theory of the junction transistor. In July 1951, Bell
announced the creation of such a device. In September 1951 Bell
held a transistor symposium, and licensed their technology for
both types of transistor to anyone who paid the required fee of 25
thousand dollars. This was the start of the transistor industry that
has changed the way that we live, in the Western world at least.