OK, back. Now I've time to tackle your questions point by point.
Okay, so after posting a thread about an audio amplifier circuit, I was told to read a bit about transistor circuit design. It was excellent advice because I know nothing about the process, only going off of projects found online. I have Paul Scherz's and Simon Monk's Practical Electronics For Inventors, so I thought I would start there.
After reading through the section on common-emitter design, I am a little confused as to the step-by-step process of designing, or more specifically, biasing the transistor.
Let's say I have a +9VDC source to power the circuit, and my transistor choice is a 2N4401. If I want a gain of 80, according to the datasheet, the collector current Ic should be 10mA, and Vce should be 1.0V.
As I said above, it looks like you're picking out values from the data sheet for a
current gain of 80. That's not usually what you want to design for in a common emitter amplifier (let's just say
CEA from now on as I know I'm gonna have to say it a lot). Usually your primary design parameter for a
CEA is the voltage gain of the stage. The current gain of bipolar transistors is a very poor parameter to design around, it varies with temperature, V
CE, V
BE and varies wildly from one transistor to the next.
So basically, if you want to keep your sanity, pick
voltage gain as your primary design parameter for a
CEA. The
CEA topology is almost always chosen in cases where
voltage gain is what you're asking out of an amplifier at that point.
I'll let you into a secret that no one who actually knew what they were doing told me until I found it out for myself. For simple amplifier circuits like the
CEA, in small signal situations, in typical uses, in typical applications (usually audio frequency stuff) the choice of transistor to use just plain doesn't matter. A well designed small signal amplifier can be made relatively insensitive to transistor choice, and once you know a bit more and can design in some negative feedback, a small signal amplifier can be designed so that you can throw in almost any old transistor (within reason) and it will still work well. The point being that in the learning stage of things good design matters more than the parts chosen and to practice design of the basics you can use just about any old (small signal) transistors that you can lay your hands on.
I mention the above because as a youngster, for years, I though there was some magic involved in picking parts and that a circuit design I'd picked up from someone else wouldn't work until I had
just the right part. That was bunkum, and a well designed transistor circuit will still work quite well even with parts that are distinctly the wrong choice.
Does this mean that to calculate the collector resistor Rc, the equation is Rc = (Vcc - Vce) / Ic? So, Rc would come out to be 800 ohms, or am I missing something here?
You want to
pick the quiescent collector voltage for yourself.
To avoid assumptions about what terminology you understand,
quiescent conditions are when the circuit is just sitting with DC bias voltages applied, but no signal applied to the circuit. So if we talk about the quiescent collector voltage (V
Cquiescent) we're just talking about a special case of the collector voltage (V
C) when the circuit is in quiescent conditions. And V
C is just the voltage on the collector, relative to ground, V
CE is the voltage on the collector relative to the emitter, and so on. V
CC is conventionally used to imply the positive rail voltage and V
EE the negative rail voltage, and most times it's assumed that V
EE is also ground if no other contrary indication is given.
The classic voltage to pick for V
Cquiescent is 0.5 * V
CC. We pick that because it gives the collector the most room to move around (being halfway between the voltage rails), thus it means that we can get the biggest possible voltage swing going on the collector (with a signal input present) before it becomes limited by reaching the rail voltage.
You can pick any arbitrary voltage, which you might do if you've got a DC coupled second stage and you want the first stage to provide bias voltage for the second stage. Whatever voltage you choose, you should always make sure that you take into consideration what voltage swing is available at that chosen voltage so that you don't get unintended signal clipping by running out of that range. If your stages are
not DC coupled then approximately 0.5*V
CC is the obvious choice as it gives you the biggest potential voltage swing.
You also need to chose I
Cquiescent. The choice is dictated by a number of things, desired output impedance, desired input impedance (the current gain of the actual transistor used comes into that), power budget, cooling budget and a bunch of other things. It this stage in the game, while you're feeling your way, I suggest you ignore practical drivers and make an arbitrary choice in the range 250uA - 5mA. After you've got a few paper or simulated designs under your belt you can come back and revisit this. Then you can design for some chosen impedances and pick I
Cquiescent to suit some practical aim, but until then the range I've given you won't hold any nasty surprises for V
CC <= 15V.
Going from that point assuming I am on the right track, biasing the base voltage and current would be a matter of Ic/href = Ib, then Rb = (Vcc-Vb) / Ib, where Vb is my desired biased point, so for this example, 4.5 volts? So 10mA/80 = 125uA ==> (9 - 4.5) / 125uA = 36k, creating a voltage divider at the base of two 36k resistors (well 33k in real component) in series? Again, am I on the right track here, or am I way off?
OK, yes, you're going a bit off-piste there because you've misunderstood the whole I
C ~ V
BE relationship. I'm going to take a break here and we can come back to it later. Perhaps you can review what I've written, ask questions and I'll come back to it all in another message.
We're halfway there. We've said:
- Pick a voltage gain GV
- Pick a quiescent collector voltage VCquiescent
- Pick a quiescent collector current ICquiescent
Next we need to:
- Calculate a collector resistor
- Calculate an emitter resistor
- Calculate the bias voltage for the base
- Pick a base biasing scheme and calculate the resistors for it
BTW I assume by "Ic/
href = Ib" you really mean "I
C/
HFE = I
B"
According to the book, a transistor has a transresistance that, usually, is not significant enough to worry about, and therefore Ic = Ie.
Any help in understanding this foggy topic is greatly appreciated.
The relationship between I
C and I
E is best summed up by I
E = I
C + I
B. Because I
B is H
FE times smaller than I
C it can be ignored in a lot of calculations, but it's best to remember the relationship so that you don't forget that I
B has to go somewhere.