4. What is a Transistor?
Semiconductors: ability to change from
conductor to insulator
Can either allow current or prohibit
current to flow
Useful as a switch, but also as an
amplifier
Essential part of many technological
advances
6. The Transistor is Born
Bell Labs (1947): Bardeen,
Brattain, and Shockley
Originally made of
germanium
Current transistors made of
doped silicon
8. How Transistors Work
Doping: adding small amounts of other
elements to create additional protons or
electrons
P-Type: dopants lack a fourth valence
electron (Boron, Aluminum)
N-Type: dopants have an additional (5th)
valence electron (Phosphorus, Arsenic)
Importance: Current only flows from P
to N
9. DOPING
The addition of a small amount
of a different substance to a
pure semiconductor crystal.
The impurities give an excess of
conducting electrons or an
excess of conducting holes
which is crucial for making a
working transistor.
10. TYPES OF TRANSISTOR
Bipolar Junction Transistor (BJT)
Field-Effect Transistor (FET)
Junction Field Effect Transistor (JFET)
Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor
(MOSFET)
11. Junction Field Effect Transistor
(JFET)
The field-effect transistor
(FET) controls the current
between two points but
does so differently than the
bipolar transistor.
The FET operates by the
effects of an electric field.
This is why the FET is
sometimes called a
unipolar transistor.
12. JFET Properties
Cut-off voltage is varying
for each JFET0.3V – 10V
N-Channel – Negative
VGS
P-Channel – Positive VGS
Internal Capacitance
Do not Forward Bias
JFET – burn out
13. Metal oxide semiconductor field effect
transistor(MOSFET)
The most common field effect transistor in both
digital and analog circuits.
Uses channel of n or p-type semiconductor,
named NMOSFET and PMOSFET, respectively.
14. SILICON ON INSULATOR (SOI)
For high-frequency circuits
(about 5 GHz) capacitive
coupling to the Si substrate
limits the switching
frequency.
These problems are being
avoided by making circuits
on insulating substrates
that have a thin,
approximately 100 nm
layer of crystalline silicon
15. APPLICATION
In integrated circuits, the desirable properties of
MOSFETs allowed them to capture nearly all market
share for digital circuits.
Discrete MOSFETs can be applied in transistor
applications, including analog circuit.
16. MEDICAL APPLICATION
There is great interest in
constructing nano electronic
devices that could detect the
concentrations of bio molecules
A parallel line of research seeks
to create nano electronic devices
which could interact with single
cells for use in basic biological
research.
These devices are called nano
sensors.
20. USING IN COMPUTER
Transistors have continued to get smaller and
smaller.
For instance, each memory location in a
computer has a pair of transistors, and there are 16
of them for each byte of memory.
21. COMPUTER MEMORY
Normally, a junction transistor is "off" when there is no
base current and switches to "on" when the base current
flows. That means it takes an electric current to switch
the transistor on or off.
This kind of arrangement is known as a flip-flop
22. ADVANTAGE & LIMITATION
ADVANTAGE;
Lower power dissipation and generally greater energy
efficiency.
Low operating voltages compatible with batteries of
only a few cells
LIMITATION;
Silicon transistors can age and fail
Sensitivity to radiation and cosmic rays