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A follower is a circuit in which the potential of the output tracks the potential of the input--an amplifier of
unit gain. Usually, the benefit is that the input of the follower has a high input resistance, while the output
of the follower has a low output resistance. Feedback is the perfect way to get this, and the proper
configuration is the series-mixing, shunt-sampling which, we know, raises the input impedance and
lowers the output impedance. However, to study followers we do not need to use feedback concepts, but
can proceed directly from fundamentals. Nevertheless, feedback will give us extra insight.
Construct a follower using a 2N4124 or similar npn transistor, VCC = - VEE = 12 V, RE = RB = 10k.
Measure the emitter and base voltages, and from them find IC, IB, , gm and re in the usual way. If you
connect the base resistor to the wiper of a potentiometer instead of to ground, you can watch the output
voltage follow the input as you vary it. The output voltage will always be about 0.7 V below the input, of
course. If you really need a DC follower with no offset, this can be done, but it is not necessary for an AC
follower, which will be capacitor coupled anyway. For this circuit, the resistance looking into the base
will be about 1.7M (so the base resistor could be a lot larger), and the output resistance will be about
19. These values are so large and so small, respectively, that they are difficult to measure accurately. A
BJT makes an excellent follower!
The small-signal equivalent circuit can be used to find the AC properties of the follower. Neglecting the
base current, we can write vo = ieRE = gmRE(vs - vo). Solving for vo, we find that vo/vs = RE / RE + re, where
we have used the fact that re = 1 / gm. This, of course, is just our feedback loop calculation, and the result
shows that the follower has a sort of voltage-divider property. It should also be clear that the output
resistance is just the parallel combination of re and RE. If we had gone to the effort of considering the
difference in the collector and emitter currents, the only effect would have been to multiply re by /( +
1).
Now couple a 1 kHz signal into the base with an 0.1 F capacitor. Calculate the corner frequency of the
resulting RC high-pass circuit, and note that it will not attenuate the input. Set both scope probes to AC,
and look at the input an output. You will be able to superimpose them, nearly. The output is just like the
input, and that is what you want. I found a gain of essentially 1.0; the calculated value was 0.998. You
can load the circuit with a 10k resistor to ground, coupled with another 0.1 capacitor. It will take some
effort to see any effect, with such a low output impedance. Note that the low output impedance does not
mean that the follower will supply any current you want--it's limited by the emitter current's going
negative to about a milliampere. So, we couldn't hang a 1k load on the output, for example, and expect
the follower to feed it.
The third terminal is the gate (G), which is the control terminal. It makes a PN junction with the channel,
and when it is reverse-biased (as it always must be!) the depletion layer eats into the channel and takes
away the charge carriers, raising its resistance. In fact, the JFET can be used as an electrically-controlled
variable resistor, but we shall not use it this way here. When the gate is sufficiently negative (in the N-
channel JFET) the channel is cut off. The voltage for this is called VP, the pinchoff voltage, and is
negative for an N-channel JFET. If the channel is pinched off from end to end, things are a bit boring.
However, if it is pinched off only at the drain end, then it acts like a constant-current source controlled by
the gate voltage. The drain current in this case more or less follows a simple quadratic law, which is
shown in the figure. The two parameters are VP and IDSS, the drain current with gate and source at the
same potential. The figure shows how to measure the necessary parameters with your meter. JFET's are
notoriously hard to manufacture according to strict specifications, so you can save money by buying a
type that is not selected to meet particular numbers. For example, the MPS102 can have IDSS anywhere
from 8 to 20 mA,and VP anything less (more positive) than -8 V. Find a JFET and measure its VP and
IDSS. Mine had -3.8 V and 12.2 mA, respectively. The values of VP and IDSS usually track.
A formula for the transconductance, gm = dID/dVGS can be found by differentiating the equation for ID.
One such formula is gm = 2ID/(Vgs - VP). The denominator is the positive difference between the two
voltages--how close it is to pinchoff. My JFET gave 2.71 mS, a good deal less than the 59.6 mS for a BJT
at the same current. JFET's are not nearly as good as BJT's at amplification, and are used only when their
specific properties are useful. The most important of these is that the gate current is practically zero.
There is some gate current, the leakage across the PN
junction, but it is very small. Nevertheless, it must
have a path to ground or the JFET will not work.
Build a follower using the same values as for the BJT, except that RG should be 1 M. An even larger
value could be used successfully, but then measurements with the multimeter would have to be corrected
for its input resistance. The input coupling capacitor can be reduced to 0.01 F, accordingly. I found a
gain of G = 0.905 and an output resistance of 593 . These are about what was expected, but more care
would probably produce better agreement. The formula for the transconductance is only approximate, and
this parameter could be measured directly for greater accuracy. The DC offset between input and output
was much larger than for the BJT, about 2.73 V, the bias necessary for the bias drain current. This
problem of DC offset also has a solution, but it involves another transistor as a reference. JFET followers
can be made with wonderfully high input resistances (the gate resistor has to go!) and this is one of their
major uses, in which no other device can do so well. Many op-amps now have JFET input stages.
Note that there is no collector resistor in these circuits. The input is into the base, but the output is taken
from the emitter. In the small-signal circuit, note that the collector is at signal ground (that is, its potential
does not vary with the signal), and is common to input and output. For this reason, a follower is often
called a common-collector amplifier. The familiar transistor amplifier with output from the collector is a
common-emitter circuit. You are correct if you assume that there is also a common-base amplifier
configuration. The only reason it is not more widely used is its low input resistance. However, this is not
a drawback for a current amplifier, and common-base amplifiers are often found in this application.
Differential Amplifier
Before getting into differential amplifiers, let's review small-signal transistor models, and introduce a new
one that will be of service. In the figure below, the new model is on the right, and our familiar models on
the left. The resistances r and re both are related to how much the output current changes with respect to
input voltage, and the relations of them to the general parameter, the transconductance gm, are shown.
Once you know the bias collector current, you can calculate these important parameters.
In the new model, which we may call the alpha model, the direct connection of the base may worry you.
However, note that the current-controlled current source in the collector makes sure that only the proper
base current flows. In the (good) approximation that = 1, there will be no base current at all. The
connection to this internal, inaccessible node is only to put the base-emitter voltage across the resistor re
to make the emitter current. The collector then takes what it likes, leaving the rest for the base. In fact,
alpha is often taken as unity when you use the alpha model for quick insight, for which it is specially
adapted.
A differential amplifier is shown at the
right. There are two inputs and two
outputs, and the circuit is assumed to be
symmetrical, which it always is in
practice, to a first approximation. If only
one output is used, the other collector
resistor can be eliminated, with no change
to the functioning of the circuit. It is very
convenient to express the inputs as the
sum of a common-mode input vcm, which
is the average of the two input voltages,
and the differential mode input vd. In the
common mode, the same voltage vcm is
applied to the two inputs. In the
differential mode, opposite and equal voltages &plusmi;vd are applied to the two inputs.
In the common mode, the amplifier acts as a single amplifier with collector resistance RC/2 and emitter
resistance RS + (RE + re)/2, so the gain (the ratio of the resistances), input impedance and output
impedance can easily be found, as for the single-transistor amplifier. If the input is taken single-ended, the
gain is RE/(2RS + RE + re). RS is usually made very large, so that the common-mode gain is small. In many
cases, RS is actually replaced by a current source that has a very high internal resistance, so the common-
mode gain is practically zero. This means that the amplifier will not respond to any signal common to the
two inputs, which is generally desirable.
In the differential mode, the symmetry of the inputs means that node "a" will not change in voltage, and i1
= -i2 = vd/(2RE + 2re). From this result, the gain at an output node is easily found: G = RC/2RE + 2re). This
is called the single-ended gain. If the output is taken between the two collectors (double-ended) the gain
is twice this value. Note that we have inverting and noninverting outputs as well as inputs. The
differential input simply divides the same total current between the two sides of the amplifier. It can go no
farther than to put all the current through one collector or the other, however.
Consider a circuit in which the input is to v1, the other input grounded, and the output is taken at vo2, with
RC1 removed. Then we have an emitter follower driving the collector of the second transistor, which
forms a common-base (this input is grounded) amplifier. This circuit is good for very high frequencies,
for reasons that we shall explore elsewhere. This circuit uses feedback, of course, though we did not use
feedback analysis.
Construct and test a differential amplifier using RC = 4.7k, RE = 470. Choose RS so that the collector
current in each transistor is about 1 mA, and use a 12V supply. The single-ended differential gain should
be about 5, the common-mode gain about 0.5 and the input impedance at one input about 100k. (How did
I get these numbers?). The actual differential gain is a little smaller than 5, because the current source for
the emitters is not a good one. The input source can be a buffered potentiometer.
If you put a 100 resistor between the input terminals of the amplifier I tested, the result is a current
sensor with a sensitivity of 1 V per mA that can be used to observe the current at any point with an
oscilloscope, which must sense with ground as one terminal. The differential amplifier removes this
limitation, which is often quite annoying.
Build and test a cascode amplifier using RC = 4.7k, RE = 1k, and a collector current of about 1 mA.
Design the voltage divider to provide the required voltages, with the divider current swamping the base
currents that will be about 10 A. Make the emitter voltage of Q2 sufficiently higher than the base
voltage of Q1 that Q1 will not be saturated. A power supply of 12V should be just sufficient, but will not
allow a very great output swing. You can couple an AC signal into the base of Q1 with a capacitor, and
observe that the collector voltage of Q1 does not vary, using the scope. I measured a gain of -4.53, in very
good agreement with my expected value of -4.55. You could get an amplifier almost as good with only
one transistor, which explains why the cascode is not seen every day. It is used only when its special
characteristics are needed, such as its very large bandwidth. Your simple cascode circuit amplifies high
frequencies so well that it might not be completely stable.
You should also be able to design current sources using either an npn or a pnp transistor, with the hints in
this section. RE should be large enough to swamp any variations in re and transistor characteristics. The
voltage to the base could also be supplied with a voltage source for extra stability, and independence of
temperature. If you use a resistive voltage divider, the divider current should be at least ten times the base
current for solid results. A current source can replace RS in a differential amplifier, with a great
improvement in common-mode gain, and this is often seen.
The circuit at the right has at least four feedback loops--can you
identify them? Besides the two emitter resistors, there is a shunt-
shunt feedback resistor whose upper end is fed by the emitter of the
second transistor instead of by the collector of the same transistor.
This follower supplies more current without causing a greater voltage
drop in the collector resistor. There is an AC feedback loop (series-
shunt) in which the 0.1F capacitor blocks the DC bias. With this
loop removed, the gain of the amplifier is about 12. The feedback
factor is 1/4.3, so the loop gain is 2.8. Therefore, the gain with
feedback will be about 12/3.8 = 3.16. I measured 3.11 on the circuit,
at 1 kHz. This circuit is used for low-gain, wideband amplifiers, and
is very stable. At high frequencies, large loop gains are dangerous.
This example operates with a +12V supply, which rather restricts the
"headroom" of the second transistor.