Stray or parasitic capacitance

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Parasitic capacitance in PNP and NPN transistors, as well as diodes, primarily becomes significant when the junction is reverse biased, leading to the formation of a depletion layer. This depletion layer acts as an insulator between two conductive plates, resembling a capacitor. In forward bias, the junction conducts, making capacitance less relevant. Understanding this concept helps clarify the design of capacitors in PN junctions and highlights the minimal stray capacitance present in forward bias. The discussion emphasizes the importance of recognizing these capacitance effects in circuit design.
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i have tried a lot but menacingly failed to understand how the parasitic capacitance exists in a pnp or npn transistor or at any diode??
 
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Well, there is a boundary between the P and N junction. Capacitance mostly become important when the junction is reverse biased and is not conducting. When reversed biased, a depletion layer is form at the junction and the thickness increase with the reverse voltage.

Guess how does the reverse biased junction with depletion layer in between? Remember the P and N material is conductive. Sooooo...You have two conductor plate one on each side. In the middle there is a layer that is not conductive ( depletion layer). What does this look like? Two conductive plate with an insulator in between?....A capacitor!

People usually don't care much on the forward biased PN junction as it is conducting. Putting a cap across a conductive wire give you just a conductive wire! At least that is true in the first approximation.
 
Well, there is a boundary between the P and N junction. Capacitance mostly become important when the junction is reverse biased and is not conducting. When reversed biased, a depletion layer is form at the junction and the thickness increase with the reverse voltage.

yungman said:
Guess how does the reverse biased junction with depletion layer in between? Remember the P and N material is conductive. Sooooo...You have two conductor plate one on each side. In the middle there is a layer that is not conductive ( depletion layer). What does this look like? Two conductive plate with an insulator in between?....A capacitor!

Thanks for this part cause its really have given me a clear assumption of what should be the design of a capacitor in the pn junction diode haha ... and i also got the picture of the stray capacitance that exists in a minimal form in the forward bias . Many many thanks ...
 
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