The common-collector amplifier
پنجشنبه, ۲۶ آبان ۱۳۹۰، ۰۲:۱۳ ب.ظ
Our next transistor configuration to study is a bit simpler for gain calculations. Called the common-collector configuration, its schematic diagram is shown in Figure below.
Common collector amplifier has collector common to both input and output.
It is called the common-collector configuration because
(ignoring the power supply battery) both the signal source and the load
share the collector lead as a common connection point as in Figure
below.
Common collector: Input is applied to base and collector. Output is from emitter-collector circuit.
It should be apparent that the load resistor in the common-collector
amplifier circuit receives both the base and collector currents, being
placed in series with the emitter. Since the emitter lead of a
transistor is the one handling the most current (the sum of base and
collector currents, since base and collector currents always mesh
together to form the emitter current), it would be reasonable to presume
that this amplifier will have a very large current gain. This
presumption is indeed correct: the current gain for a common-collector
amplifier is quite large, larger than any other transistor amplifier
configuration. However, this is not necessarily what sets it apart from
other amplifier designs.
Let’s proceed immediately to a SPICE analysis of this amplifier
circuit, and you will be able to immediately see what is unique about
this amplifier. The circuit is in Figure below. The netlist is in
Figure below.
Common collector: Output equals input less a 0.7 V VBE drop.
Unlike the common-emitter amplifier from the
previous section, the common-collector produces an output voltage in direct rather than inverse
proportion to the rising input voltage. See Figure above. As the input
voltage increases, so does the output voltage. Moreover, a close
examination reveals that the output voltage is nearly identical to the input voltage, lagging behind by about 0.7 volts.
This is the unique quality of the common-collector amplifier: an
output voltage that is nearly equal to the input voltage. Examined from
the perspective of output voltage change for a given amount of input voltage change,
this amplifier has a voltage gain of almost exactly unity (1), or 0 dB.
This holds true for transistors of any ? value, and for load resistors
of any resistance value.
It is simple to understand why the output voltage of a
common-collector amplifier is always nearly equal to the input voltage.
Referring to the diode current source transistor model in Figure below,
we see that the base current must go through the base-emitter PN
junction, which is equivalent to a normal rectifying diode. If this
junction is forward-biased (the transistor conducting current in either
its active or saturated modes), it will have a voltage drop of
approximately 0.7 volts, assuming silicon construction. This 0.7 volt
drop is largely irrespective of the actual magnitude of base current;
thus, we can regard it as being constant:
Emitter follower: Emitter voltage follows base voltage (less a 0.7 V VBE drop.)
Given the voltage polarities across the base-emitter PN junction and the load resistor, we see that these must
add together to equal the input voltage, in accordance with Kirchhoff’s
Voltage Law. In other words, the load voltage will always be about 0.7
volts less than the input voltage for all conditions where the
transistor is conducting. Cutoff occurs at input voltages below 0.7
volts, and saturation at input voltages in excess of battery (supply)
voltage plus 0.7 volts.
Because of this behavior, the common-collector amplifier circuit is also known as the voltage-follower or emitter-follower amplifier, because the emitter load voltages follow the input so closely.
Applying the common-collector circuit to the amplification of AC
signals requires the same input “biasing” used in the common-emitter
circuit: a DC voltage must be added to the AC input signal to keep the
transistor in its active mode during the entire cycle. When this is
done, the result is the non-inverting amplifier in Figure below.
Common collector (emitter-follower) amplifier.
The results of the SPICE
simulation in Figure below show that the output follows the input. The
output is the same peak-to-peak amplitude as the input. Though, the DC
level is shifted downward by one VBE diode drop.
Common collector (emitter-follower): Output V3 follows input V1 less a 0.7 V VBE drop.
Here’s another view of the circuit (Figure below) with oscilloscopes connected to several points of interest.
Common collector non-inverting voltage gain is 1.
Since this amplifier configuration doesn’t provide any voltage gain
(in fact, in practice it actually has a voltage gain of slightly less
than 1), its only amplifying factor is current. The common-emitter
amplifier configuration examined in the previous section had a current
gain equal to the ? of the transistor, being that the input current went
through the base and the output (load) current went through the
collector, and ? by definition is the ratio between the collector and
base currents. In the common-collector configuration, though, the load
is situated in series with the emitter, and thus its current is equal to
the emitter current. With the emitter carrying collector current and base current, the load in this type of amplifier has all the current of the collector running through it plus the input current of the base. This yields a current gain of ? plus 1:
Once again, PNP transistors are just as valid to use in the
common-collector configuration as NPN transistors. The gain calculations
are all thesame, as is the non-inverting of the amplified signal. The
only difference is in voltage polarities and current directions shown in
Figure below.
PNP version of the common-collector amplifier.
A popular application of the common-collector amplifier is for
regulated DC power supplies, where an unregulated (varying) source of DC
voltage is clipped at a specified level to supply regulated (steady)
voltage to a load. Of course, zener diodes already provide this function
of voltage regulation shown in Figure below.
Zener diode voltage regulator.
However, when used in this direct fashion, the amount of current that
may be supplied to the load is usually quite limited. In essence, this
circuit regulates voltage across the load by keeping current through the
series resistor at a high enough level to drop all the excess power
source voltage across it, the zener diode drawing more or less current
as necessary to keep the voltage across itself steady. For high-current
loads, a plain zener diode voltage regulator would have to shunt a heavy
current through the diode to be effective at regulating load voltage in
the event of large load resistance or voltage source changes.
One popular way to increase the current-handling ability of a
regulator circuit like this is to use a common-collector transistor to
amplify current to the load, so that the zener diode circuit only has to
handle the amount of current necessary to drive the base of the
transistor. (Figure below)
Common collector application: voltage regulator.
There’s really only one caveat to this approach: the load voltage
will be approximately 0.7 volts less than the zener diode voltage, due
to the transistor’s 0.7 volt base-emitter drop. Since this 0.7 volt
difference is fairly constant over a wide range of load currents, a
zener diode with a 0.7 volt higher rating can be chosen for the
application.
Sometimes the high current gain of a single-transistor,
common-collector configuration isn’t enough for a particular
application. If this is the case, multiple transistors may be staged
together in a popular configuration known as a Darlington pair, just an extension of the common-collector concept shown in Figure below.
An NPN darlington pair.
Darlington pairs essentially place one transistor as the
common-collector load for another transistor, thus multiplying their
individual current gains. Base current through the upper-left transistor
is amplified through that transistor’s emitter, which is directly
connected to the base of the lower-right transistor, where the current
is again amplified. The overall current gain is as follows:
Voltage gain is still nearly equal to 1 if the entire assembly is
connected to a load in common-collector fashion, although the load
voltage will be a full 1.4 volts less than the input voltage shown in
Figure below.
Darlington pair based common-collector amplifier loses two VBE diode drops.
Darlington pairs may be purchased as discrete units (two transistors
in the same package), or may be built up from a pair of individual
transistors. Of course, if even more current gain is desired than what
may be obtained with a pair, Darlington triplet or quadruplet assemblies
may be constructed.
REVIEW:Common-collector transistor amplifiers are so-called
because the input and output voltage points share the collector lead of
the transistor in common with each other, not considering any power
supplies.The common-collector amplifier is also known as an emitter-follower.The output voltage on a common-collector amplifier will be in phase with the input voltage, making the common-collector a non-inverting amplifier circuit.The current gain of a common-collector amplifier is equal to ? plus
1. The voltage gain is approximately equal to 1 (in practice, just a
little bit less).A Darlington pair is a pair of transistors “piggybacked” on
one another so that the emitter of one feeds current to the base of the
other in common-collector form. The result is an overall current gain
equal to the product (multiplication) of their individual
common-collector current gains (? plus 1).
Lessons In Electric Circuits copyright (C) 2000-2010 Tony R. Kuphaldt
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