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Transistors

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Transistors. Definition. An electronic device made of a semiconductor that can act as an insulator and a conductor. The ability to change from these two states enables the device switch or amplify. It has of three components: Source Gate Drain. Transistors. Transistors. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Transistors
Page 2: Transistors

DefinitionAn electronic device made of a

semiconductor that can act as an insulator and a conductor.

The ability to change from these two states enables the device switch or amplify.

It has of three components:SourceGateDrain

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Transistors

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TransistorsTransistors replaced vacuum tubes.Transistors are central to the

Integrated Circuit, and therefore, all electronic devices of

the information age, such as: pc’s, cellular phones, ipods, pda’s,

intelligent cars and buildings…….. are made possible.

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How a Transistor WorksThe transistor can function as:

An insulator A conductor

The transistor's ability to fluctuate between these two states that enables to switch or amplify.

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Page 6: Transistors

How a Transistor WorksThe transistor has many

applications, but only two basic functions:

switching and modulation (amplification).

In the simplest sense, the transistor works like a dimmer.

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How a Transistor WorksWith a push the knob of the dimmer,

the light comes on and off. You have a switch. Rotate the knob back and forth, and

the light grows brighter, dimmer, brighter, dimmer.

Then you have a modulator.

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the dimmer

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How a Transistor Works cont.Both the dimmer and the transistor can control current flow.

Both can act as a switch and as a modulator/amplifier.

The important difference is that the “hand” operating the transistor is millions of times faster.

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Transistors are made of semi-conductors such as silicon and gallium arsenide.

These materials carry electricity not well enough to be called conductors;

not badly enough to be called insulators.

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•Hence their name semiconductor.•The importance of a transistor is in its ability to control its own semi conductance, •namely acting like a conductor when needed, or as an insulator (nonconductor) when that is needed.

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You can compare a transistor to an ordinary faucet.

The water enters the faucet in the pipeline from the water distributor, which would correspond to the source in the Transistor.

The water then leaves the faucet into the sink, this would be the drain in the Transistor.

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How a Transistor Works cont.

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How a Transistor Works cont.The water tap controls the amount,

flow, of water. In the Transistor the gate operates as

this controller. With a small force you can control the

water flow with the water tap, just as you can control the current flowing from the source to the drain, with a small change of the charge of the gate.

Page 14: Transistors

Transistors are Made of SiliconSilicon is a grey colored element

with crystalline structure. It is the second most abundant

element in the earth's crust, after oxygen.

Silicon is always found in combined form in nature, often with oxygen as quartz, and is found in rocks and silica sand.

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Transistors are Made of SiliconTo be able to use silicon as a semiconductor, it needs to be in a very pure form.

If there is more than one impure particle in a million, the silicon can not be used.

Silicon is the most frequently used semiconducting material today.

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DopingThe 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.

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n-type doping

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p-type doping

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Conduction Band

Valence Band: Is a part of the molecule, called band, where you can find the electrons

Energy Gap: Is the energy difference between the valence gap and the conduction band

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Is a part in which electrons can move freely and can accelerate under an electric field,

constituting an electric current.

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Energy gap

Conduction Band

Valence BandMetals

Conduction Band

Valence Band

SemiconductorsSemiconductors

Conduction Band

Valence Band

InsulatorsBigger Energy gap

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Transistor typesMOS - Metal Oxide Semiconductor

FET - Field Effect Transistor BJT - Bipolar Junction Transistor

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Moore’s LawIt’s an observation made by Gordon E. Moore, in which he predicted that the number of transistors, inside an Integrated Circuit, could be doubled every 24 months.

At the density that also minimized the cost of a transistor.

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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/06/Moore_Law_diagram_%282004%29.png ◄◄

Page 24: Transistors

http://www.bellsystemmemorial.com/belllabs_transistor.html ◄◄