Lab 6
Lab 6
Experiment 6
Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT) Circuits:
Inverter and Common Emitter Amplifier
Introduction
BJTs are extensively used in all types of electronic circuits. The aim of this part of the
experiment is to familiarize you with the basic modes of operation and features of a
BJT through the study of simple BJT circuits. The BJT that you will be using in this
experiment is BC 547 (the pin diagram is shown in Fig.1), which has a typical current
rating of 100 mA (maximum). Make sure to connect the transistor correctly in the
circuits. Also, while changing any component in the circuit, please turn the power supply
off, and turn it on again only after all the required changes have been made and the
circuit is complete.
Fig.1
BJT Inverter Circuit
BJT inverter circuit is commonly used to implement the NOT function (i.e., the output is an inverted form
of the input) using discrete BJTs. The circuit also illustrates the basic modes of operation of a BJT.
Experiment
(i) Wire the BJT inverter circuit of Fig. 2. Use RC = 1 k. VCC
(ii) Adjust the FG to obtain a 200 Hz triangular wave (0 to +5 V) and 5V
connect the same as the input (Vi) to the circuit.
RC
(iii) Use the X-Y mode and sketch the voltage transfer characteristic (VTC
V0 versus Vi) of the inverter as seen on the DSO (it should be somewhat RB V0
similar to the one shown in Fig. 3). Note down the approximate values 47 k
of VOH, VOL, VIL, and VIH. Indicate the modes of operation of the BJT on
the different regions of the VTC. Vi
D1
(iv) Using the VTC, estimate the current gain of the transistor.
Fig.2
(v) Now use RC = 15 k, and repeat steps (ii) and (iii). V0
(vi) Explain the effect of RC on the BJT inverter characteristic. VOH
Note: The transistor has a low base-emitter junction reverse breakdown voltage.
Fig.3
To ensure that this junction does not break down due to wrong polarity of the
applied voltage, the diode D1 is used – it clamps the maximum reverse bias
across the junction to approximately 0.7 V. VOL
0
V V Vi
Common Emitter Amplifier IL IH
BJT amplifiers most commonly employ the common emitter (CE) configuration. You will check the biasing
conditions of the given circuit and also test the CE amplifier.
Experiment
Before coming to the lab, you should have analyzed the given BJT circuit (for R C = 1.5 k and 15 k) and
calculated the currents IB, IC, and IE, and the voltages VB, VC, and VE. Use = 100, VBE = 0.7 V, and VCEsat = 0.2
V.
1
Esc 201A: Introduction to Electronics Department of Electrical Engineering
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur
(v) Switch-off the +12V VCC supply to the BJT circuit. Make RC=3.3 k. Now connect the electrolytic
capacitors and RL. Take care to observe the correct polarities when you connect the electrolytic
capacitors.
(vi) Adjust the FG output to give 0.2 sin t V (f=1 kHz). Switch on VCC and connect the FG output to the
BJT circuit through capacitor C1.
(vii) Observe the amplifier input (Vi = VB) and output VO on CH-1 and CH-2, respectively.
(viii) Sketch the two waveforms. Measure the voltage gain of the amplifier (Voltage gain, AV = VO/Vi).
(ix) Comment on the phase relationship between the amplifier input and output waveforms.
It is known from theory that the gain of the CE amplifier can be increased by connecting a capacitor in
parallel with RE.
(i) Change RC back to 3.3 k.
(ii) Connect a 100 E, and measure the gain. You
may need to use a potential divider to reduce the amplitude of Rp1
the input signal (5mV to 10mV peak) so that output signal 10 k
waveform is undistorted.
VB
Notes: +
+
V_{XY} = V_X – V_Y where V_X is the voltage at node X vs
Rp2
Vin
measured with respect to ground 1 k
–
B: base, E: emitter, C: collector –
V_{BE}< 0.7 V: transistor is cutoff
V_{BE} = 0.7 V, V_{CE}> 0.2 V: transistor is in active region
V_{BE} = 0.7 V, V_{CE} = 0.2 V: transistor is in saturation
I_C = beta * I_B when the transistor is in active region.
I_E = (beta + 1) * I_B when the transistor is in active region
Take beta = 100