FOIWATER said:If some one could explain the operation of both the double emitter transistor and the circuit in general I would be very thankful.
All the best,
You skipped over what I would consider to be the most important feature and deserving a sentence or two, the way the unconventional Q1 controls Q2.If either A or B is low, transistor Q2 will not receive the required Vbe threshold voltage to conduct
OK, and this will in turn ...FOIWATER said:It seems as though the way it operates is that if either one of the emitters of Q1 is attached to a low, Q1 will saturate.
FOIWATER said:I explained it above --> what I think will occur in all these scenarios.
If either input is low, Q1 will not saturate. ✗[/size][/color]
I'd say the "two diode" model is perfectly acceptable for Q1. Give it a try.But I have been told by my professor not to assume this "two-diode" method of analyzing these circuits (in a lecture, not by way of this specific example)
True. But it's the collector of Q1 that is connected to Q2, so you need to involve Q1 collector in your explanation.FOIWATER said:OK - so in using the two diode model - if either of the inputs is low - current is "steered" through one of the two diodes "pointing" to the left, so Q1 emitter does not drive Q2.
How do you send a transistor into saturation? How would you recognize that a transistor is in saturation? What is a tell-tale characteristic of a transistor being in saturation?What precisely was incorrect about the statement I made about saturation?
Do these arrows give a hint?I am not sure what voltage is required at the base of Q2, no
Didn't you say the same about CMOS? So if someone wanted to solder together a simple logic arrangement for the home or car, what technology do you say he should use?Enthalpy said:What I really don't grasp: TTL and bipolar logic is as dead as a rat.
The medium is the message.©Why do teacher keep telling about it decade after decade?
For any small signal silicon transistor, VBE is approx 0.6V while the transistor is functioning as a transistor. That's the voltage of a forward-biased PN junction. If you follow the arrows, to get from the base of Q2 to ground you must drop down two PN junction drops: VBE of Q2 then VBE of Q3. With each of these drops being approx 0.6V, it makes the base of Q2 how many volts?FOIWATER said:The voltage required is Vbe(sat)? I thought you meant a specific voltage value, of that I would not know..
I don't think anyone speaks of Vbe(sat) of a transistor. It isn't a useful data figure, apart from being around 0.6 to 0.8V for every small signal transistor, and it varies with collector current so it's value conveys nothing useful.Send a transistor into saturation by exceeding it's Vbe(sat), because increasing Vbe to a higher level increase base current, this increase in base current increases collector current, this increased collector current causes more of the voltage Vcc to be dropped across the resistor (say R3 for Q2) which leaves the Vce lower overall. Because this voltage is lower, the collector current becomes lower, which in turn causes Vce to increase, which in turn causes the collector current to increase and so on and so fourth.