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28. According to what criteria transistor used for voltage or current amplification
According to the three type of configuration transistor used for voltage or current
amplification.
29. How transistors do amplification?
Passing the input current signal from a region of low resistance to a region of high resistance.
This concept of transfer of resistance has given the name TRANSfer-resISTOR (Transistor)
30. Why CE configuration is widely used in amplifier circuit?
Voltage gain and current gain greater than unity
Ratio of output resistance to input resistance small 10Ω to 100Ω.
Coupling is ideal between various transistor stages.
31. Write down the operating regions and bias conditions of a transistor?
Si.no Region Emitter-Base junction Collector-Base junction
1 Cut-off Reverse bias Reverse bias
2 Active Forward bias Reverse bias
3 Saturation Forward bias Forward bias
32. Define DC biasing (or) discuss the importance of biasing? (DEC-2008)
In order to operate transistor in the desired region we have to apply external dc voltage of
correct polarity and magnitude to the two junctions of the transistor. This is nothing but the biasing
of the transistor. Because dc voltage is used to bias the transistor, biasing is known as dc biasing of
the transistor.
33. Define DC operating point or quiescent point
When we bias a transistor we establish a certain current and voltage conditions for the
transistor. These conditions are known as operating condition or dc operating point or quiescent
point.
34. Operating point depends what are the parameter.
β
Ico
VBE
Temperature
35. List the typical junction voltage of NPN transistor
Si.no Transistor VCE(sat) VBE(sat) VBE(active) VBE(cut-in) VBE(cut-off)
1 Si 0.2v 0.8v 0.7v 0.5v 0v
2 Ge 0.1V 0.3V 0.2V 0.1V 0.1V
PNP- transistor only polarities will change.
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50. Why BJT needs temperature compensation against VBE Changes? (NOV/DEC-2005)
ICBO increases with increase in temperature, IB reduces due to reduction in VBE, maintaining
IC fairly constant.
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51. Why do you fix the operating point in the middle of the dc load line?
We fix the operating point in the middle of the dc load line the output signal is sinusoidal
waveform without any distortion, thus the point is the best operating point.
52. Write short notes on zero current drift in FET (APRIL/MAY-2008)
In JFET, the drain current varies with changes in the temperature due to two factors. One
factor increases drain current and other factor decreases drain current with increase in temperature.
Therefore, it is possible to design biasing circuit which compensates these tow factors so that there is
no change of drain current with temperature. Such biasing is called biasing for zero current drift.
53. FET is an unipolar device-justify
FET operation depends only on the flow of majority carriers holes for P-channel FETs
and electrons for N-channel FET. Therefore they are called as unipolar devices.
54. Distinguish between FET and BJT
S.No Parameter BJT FET
1 Control element Current controlled device Voltage controlled device
2 Device type Bipolar devices Uni-polar device
3. Input resistance Less High
4. Sensitivity High Less
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Miller’s theorem states that, the effect of resistance Z on the input circuit is a ratio
of input voltage Vi to the current I which flows from the input to the output.
Miller’s theorem states that, the effect of resistance Z on the output circuit is a
ratio of output voltage Vo to the current I which flows from the output to the
input.
13. What are the techniques used to improve input impedance.
Using direct coupling (Darlington connection)
Using Bootstrap techniques
14. Define Darlington connection
Cascaded connection of two emitter followers is called Darlington
connection.
15. Define complementary Darlington transistor
Darlington pair with the exception that a PNP transistor drivers an NPN transistor
16. Why the Darlington connection is not possible for more number of stages?
In Darlington connection of two transistors, emitter of the first transistor is
directly connected to the base of the second transistor. Because of direct coupling
dc output current of the first stage is (1+hfe)Ib1. If Darlington connection for n
stage is (1+hfe)n times Ib1. Due to very large amplification factor even tow stage
Darlington connection has large output current and output stage may have to be a
power stage. As power amplifiers are not used in the amplifier circuits it is not
possible to use more than two transistors in the Darlington connection.
17. Why bootstrapping technique is called so?
When AV1, is called bootstrapping. The name arises from the fact that, if one end
of the resistor R3 changes in voltage, the other end of R3 moves through the same
potential difference; it is as if R3 is pulling itself up by its bootstraps.
18. What is the need for bootstrapped Darlington circuit?
Resistance between base and collector of transistor is given as 1/hob, which is of
the order of 2MΩ.to overcome this problem, same bootstrapping technique can be
used with Darlington circuit.
19. list the three basic configuration of FET
common source
common drain
Common gate.
20. Define common drain circuit?
In common drain amplifier circuit input is applied between gate and source and
output is taken between source and drain.
21. Define common source circuit?
In common source amplifier circuit input is applied between gate and source and
output is taken between drain and source.
22. Define common gate circuit?
In common drain amplifier circuit input is applied between source and gate output
is taken between drain and gate.
23. Define drain resistance?
The change in the drain source voltage due to change in drain current with
constant VGS can be determined using the drain resistance rd.
∆VDS=rd ∆ID.
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networks N/2 about the line of symmetry is called bisection theorem or Bartlett’s
bisection theorem.
36. what is meant by CMRR of a differential amplifier?(APRIL/MAY-
2004),(NOV/DEC-2005),(MAY/JUNE-2006),(MAY/JUNE-2007),(DEC-2008)
The ability of a differential amplifier to reject a common mode signal is expressed
by a ratio called common mode rejection ratio denoted as CMRR. It is defined as
the ratio of the differential voltage gain Ad to common mode voltage gain Ac
CMRR=ρ ρ= Ad / Ac
37. Methods of improving CMRR
To improve the CMRR, the common mode gain Ac must be reduced. The
common mode gain Ac approaches zero as RE tends to infinity. This is because RE
introduces a negative feedback in the common mode operation which reduces the
common mode gain Ac. Thus higher the value of RE, lesser is the value of Ac and
higher is the value of CMRR. The differential gain Ad is not dependent on RE
38. RE cannot select high why?
Large RE needs higher biasing voltage to set the operating Q point of the
transistor.
This increase the overall chip area.
39. What are the other methods to improve CMRR without RE?
Constant current bias method
Current mirror circuit.
40. Define current mirror circuit?
The circuit in which the output current is forced to equal the input current is
called as current mirror circuit. In a current mirror circuit, the output current is the
mirror image of input current.
41. List the advantage of current mirror circuit?
Provides very high emitter resistance RE.
Requires fewer components than the constant current bias.
Simple to design
Easy to fabricate.
With properly matched transistors, collector current thermal stability is
achieved.
42. Define active load
The current mirror circuit can be used as a collector load instead of RC. Such a
load is called an active load.
43. List the advantage of active load
provides very high ac resistance
provides high differential mode voltage gain
Ad High
CMRR High
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The power amplifier is said to be class b if the Q point and the input signal are selected such
that the output signal is obtained for the full cycle of the input signal.
3. What are the active devices used in power amplifiers? (Nov/Dec 2008)
• CC or the emitter follower is used because of low output impedance
• CE is used for impedance matching
4. Why Class A amplifier must not be operated under no signal condition?
Under no signal condition, the entire DC power input PDC=VCCICQ is dissipated as the heat.
Thus power dissipation is maximum under no signal condition. This may increase the transistor
junction temperature beyond safe value, which may lead to transistor damage. To avoid this, class A
amplifier must not be operated under no signal condition.
5. What is the classification of Class A amplifier?
• Directly coupled
• Transformer coupled
6. What are the advantages of directly coupled power amplifier?
• The circuit is simple to design and implement
• The load is connected directly to the collector circuit .Hence the output transformer is not
necessary.
7. What are the disadvantages of the directly coupled power amplifier?
• Power dissipation is more
• The output impedance is high
• The efficiency is high due to large power dissipation
8. List any two advantages of the transformer coupled class A power amplifier?
(Nov/Dec 2006)
• Efficiency of the operation is high compared to directly coupled amplifier.
• Impedance matching required for maximum power transfer is possible.
9. What is heat sink? Give its advantages? (APRIL/MAY-2008)
A heat sink is a mechanical device which is connected or press fit to the case of the transistor
that provides a large surface area, to dissipate the developed heat. The heat sink carries the heat to the
surroundings.
Advantages:
The temperature of the case gets lowered
The power handling capacity of the transistors can approach the rated maximum
value.
10. Why the efficiency of the Class A resistive loaded power amplifier is less than the
transformer coupled counterpart? (May/June 2006)
This is because power dissipation is large in the transformer coupled counterpart.
11. What is the conversion efficiency in power amplifiers? (May/June 2006)
The efficiency of an amplifiers represent the amount of ac power delivered or transferred to the load
from the dc source ie. Accepting dc power input.
12. Define the class C operation? (May/June 2007)
The power amplifier is said to be class b if the Q point and the input signal are selected such that the
output signal is obtained for less than half cycle for the full cycle of the input signal. For this
operation Q-point is to be shifted below x-axis.
13. Which power amplifier gives minimum distortion? Why?(Nov/Dec 2005)
Class A amplifier gives minimum distortion because output is obtained for the entire cycle of the
input signal.
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14. What is crossover distortion in a power amplifier and how to eliminate it?
(MAY/JUNE-2007)(APRIL/MAY-2003)
For making transistor ON, it is necessary that VBE voltage must exceed 0.7V. Due to this, in
class B amplifier while crossing over from one half cycle to other, as long as input is below 0.7V,
none of the transistor is ON and output is Zero. Due to this, there is distortion in the output, which is
called the cross over distortion. To overcome this distortion, a small forward bias is kept applied to
the transistors so that when input is zero, this additional forward bias can make the transistor ON
immediately elimination cross over distortion.
15. Compare the efficiency of class A, B, C, AB (Nov/Dec 2007)
CLASS A B C AB
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θ= 0
C/W
Pd
24. Define conversion efficiency of a power amplifier. What is its value for class C power
amplifier? (MAY/JUNE-2006) (MAY/JUNE-2007)
The ratio of AC power delivered to the load to the DC power input is called conversion
efficiency of a power amplifier.
% conversion efficiency=PAC/PDCX100
For class C power amplifiers, the conversion efficiency is almost 100%
25. What is meant by harmonic distortion or non linear distortion? (APRIL/MAY-2004)
At the output of power amplifiers, along with the fundamental frequency (f) component,
additional frequency components are also present whose frequencies are integral multiples of
fundamental frequency such as 2f, 3f…. . These are called harmonics. The output gets distorted due
to these components. This is called the harmonic distortion.
26. Define voltage amplifier? (NOV/DEC-2008)
The system consists of many stages connected in cascade. Hence basically it is a multistage
amplifier. The input is sound signal of a human speaker and the output is given to the loud speaker
which is an amplified input signal. The input and the intermediate stages are small signal amplifiers.
The sufficient voltage gain is obtained by all the intermediate stages. Hence these stages are called
voltage amplifiers.
27. List the features of large signal amplifiers
input signal level or amplitude of a power amplifier is large
output of power amplifier has large current and voltage swings
h parameter not used here
low output impedance
large size
large power dissipation rating
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Circuit simple
Output transformer is not necessary
Circuit cheaper
Less number of components required as load is directly coupled
Disadvantage:
Load resistance is directly connected in collector and carries the quiescent
collector current. This causes considerable wastage of power.
Power dissipation is more. Hence power dissipation arrangements like heat
sink are essential
The output impedance is high hence circuit cannot be used for low impedance
loads, such as loudspeakers
The efficiency is very poor, due to large power dissipation
32. List the advantages and disadvantages of transformer coupled class A amplifier?
Advantage:
Efficiency higher than directly coupled
The Dc bias current flows through load
Impedance matching required
Disadvantage:
The circuit is complicated to design.
The circuit bulkier, heavier and costlier
Frequency response of the circuit is poor.
34. List the advantages and disadvantages of push pull class B amplifier?
Advantage:
Efficiency higher than class A
No input signal, power dissipation is zero
Reduce harmonic distortion
The Dc bias current flows opposite direction.
Ripple present in supply voltage also get eliminated
Impedance matching possible
Disadvantage:
Two center tap transformers are necessary
The circuit bulkier, heavier and costlier
Frequency response of the circuit is poor.
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Disadvantage:
The circuit needs two separate voltage supplies
The output is distorted to cross over distortion.
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1. Define rectifiers?
A rectifier is a device which converts a.c. voltage to pulsating d.c. voltage, using
one or more p-n junction diode.
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2 D.C. load voltage Less with compare to FWR Twice that in HWR
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hence bleeder resistance is not required. harmful to diodes and capacitor. To avoid this,
bleeder resistance is used.
4. The ripple voltage is a function of load The ripple voltage is not dependent on the
current i.e. loads resistance. load.
5. The regulation is poor The regulation is better
6. Not suitable for variable loads Suitable for variable loads
7. The d.c. output voltage is higher as the The d.c.output voltage is low compared to
capacitor always charges to peak value capacitor.
8. Normally used for single phase, high Used is polyphase rectifier systems employing
voltage, fixed load applications. mercury are rectifiers.
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37. Define the ripple factor for half wave and full wave rectifier? (May/June 2007)
For half wave:
Ripple factor = [(Im) / (Im / ∏ )] 2 – 1 = 1.4674
= 1.211
For full wave:
Ripple factor = Im / 2
=0.48
38. Define voltage regulation (April/May 2008)
Voltage regulation is defined as the factor which tells about the change in the d.c output
voltage as the load changes from no load to full load condition.
39. What are the advantages of the bridge rectifier over the center tapped rectifier?
(May/June 2006)
No center tap is required for the transformer secondary. Hence wherever possible the ac
voltage can be directly applied to the bridge.
• Net d.c component flowing is zero which reduces the losses and danger of saturation.
• The circuit can be used for high voltage applications.
40. Name the types of linear voltage regulator
• Transistor Series regulator
• Transistor Shunt regulator
• Zener regulator
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