CC Amplifier
CC Amplifier
CC Amplifier
An Altair Company
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CC Amplifier
The common-collector (CC) amplifier is usually referred to as an emitter-follower (EF). The input is applied to the base through a coupling capacitor,
and the output is at the emitter. The voltage gain of a CC amplifier is approximately 1, and its main advantages are its high input resistance and
current gain.
An emitter-follower circuit with voltage-divider bias is shown below. The input signal is capacitive coupled to the base, the output signal is
capacitive coupled from the emitter, and the collector is at ac ground. There is no phase inversion, and the output is approximately the same
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Circuit Topology
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Waveforms
Input Voltage Output Voltage
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The common-collector configuration has both the signal source and the load share the collector lead as a common connection point.
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.
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The common-collector produces an output voltage in direct rather than inverse proportion to the rising input voltage. 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
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 β value, and for load resistors of any resistance value.
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The output voltage of a common-collector amplifier is always nearly equal to the input voltage. Referring to the diode current source transistor, 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.
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
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Conclusion
Common-collector transistor amplifiers are so-called because the input and output voltage points share the collector lead of the transistor in
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.
Thus the Common Collector Amplifier model is implemented using the Activate tool.
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