Summary: Transistor I-V Characteristics
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Let's now take a look at some current voltage relationships for
the bipolar transistor. In the absence of any voltage or
current on the emitter-base junction, if we were to make a plot
of
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What happens if we now also have some bias
applied to the emitter-base junction? As we saw, so long as the
base-collector junction is reverse biased, almost all of the
collector current consists of electrons which have been injected
into the base by the emitter, diffuse across the base region,
and then fall down the base-collector junction. The rate at
which electrons fall down the junction does not depend on how
large a drop there is (e.g. how big
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The only drawback with what we have so far is that except in some specialized high-frequency circuits, the bipolar transistor is very rarely used in the common base configuration. Most of the time, you will see it in either the common emitter configuration, or the common collector configuration. The common emitter is probably the way the transistor is most often used.
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Note that we have a current source driving the base, and we have
applied just one battery all the way from the collector to the
emitter. The battery now has to do two thing: a) It has to
provide reverse bias for the base-collector junction and b) it
has to provide forward bias for the base emitter junction. For
this reason, the
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