Assignment
Assignment
Institute of Technology
Department of Computer Science
Digital Electronics assignment One (10%)
#Questions
1. What is the Transistor? How to fabricate it or Transistor doping or Transistor charging
principles?
Transistor is a device that regulates current or voltage flow and acts as switch or
gate for electronic signals.
Transistor was invented by W.H. Brattain, John Bardeen and William Shockley in
1947. The word transistor was derived from transfer resistor, as they transfer signals
from low resistance to high resistance.
It is a three-layer semiconductor device in which an n-type semiconductor is
sandwiched between two p-type layers or a p-type semiconductor is sandwiched
between two n-type layers.
It is extensively used in amplifiers, digital switches and oscillator circuits.
A transistor has three terminals, namely emitter (E), base (B) and collector (C). We
have two types of transistors, npn and pnp.
The emitter is heavily doped and injects a large number of majority carriers into the
base.
The emitter is always forward biased with respect to the base. In pnp transistors,
majority carriers are holes and in npn transistors, majority carriers are electrons.
Transistors are three terminal active devices made from different semiconductor
materials that can act as either an insulator or a conductor by the application of a
small signal voltage.
The transistor's ability to change between these two states enables it to have two
basic functions: "switching" (digital electronics) or "amplification" (analogue
electronics).
2. What are BJT and JFET transistors?
Bipolar Transistors are current regulating devices that control the amount of current
flowing through them in proportion to the amount of biasing voltage applied to their
base terminal acting like a current-controlled switch.
3. Describe the working Principles of BJT transistors like current flow, current relations,
voltage relations, etc.
It has a voltage gain that is always less than "1" (unity). The load resistance of the
common collector transistor receives both the base and collector currents giving a
large current gain (as with the common emitter configuration) therefore, providing
good current amplification with very little voltage gain.
4. How do BJT and JFET transistors differ?