Reverse saturation current and leakage current in a BJT

AI Thread Summary
IS, or reverse saturation current, refers to the base-emitter junction's reverse current in a BJT, while ICBO is the collector-base reverse current, often considered leakage current. The confusion arises because both terms are sometimes used interchangeably, despite representing different junctions within the BJT. The collector-base junction's reverse saturation current is denoted as Ics, and the base-emitter junction's as Ies, which differ due to varying doping densities. Understanding these distinctions is crucial for accurate analysis of BJT behavior and characteristics. Clear differentiation in terminology is essential for effective communication in semiconductor theory.
anubhavsingh
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
TL;DR Summary
What is the relation between reverse saturation current and leakage current in a BJT?
I have been studying Studying Donald Neamen's Electronic Circuits 4th edition and Sedra Smith's Microelectronics 7th edition for quite some time now. I have been self studying. After searching extensively on Internet as well as trying to understand from the books, I have not been able to differentiate between two quantities in the context of BJT.

These two quantities are: IS and ICBO

According to Sedra Smith, ICBO is the collector base reverse current and
del3.JPG

Whereas IS is the saturation or scale current given by
del2.jpg

del1.jpg

I have been wondering are these two quantities same or share some relation between them because I find the name for both these quantities being used inter-changeably at many places which is quite confusing and I believe they are not the same.

Also, I am confused which current is being referred to when on Internet I find the term "reverse saturation current". Searching on Internet the term "reverse saturation current" gives two kinds of sources: one referring it as IS and the other referring it as ICBO Another similar quantity is ICBO.

References

Sedra Smith
Donald Neamen
 

Attachments

  • del2.jpg
    del2.jpg
    1.7 KB · Views: 201
Last edited:
Engineering news on Phys.org
anubhavsingh said:
Summary:: What is the relation between reverse saturation current and leakage current in a BJT?

I have been studying Studying Donald Neamen's Electronic Circuits 4th edition and Sedra Smith's Microelectronics 7th edition for quite some time now. I have been self studying. After searching extensively on Internet as well as trying to understand from the books, I have not been able to differentiate between two quantities in the context of BJT.

These two quantities are: IS and ICBO

According to Sedra Smith, ICBO is the collector base reverse current and
View attachment 290364
Whereas IS is the saturation or scale current given by
View attachment 290363
View attachment 290361
I have been wondering are these two quantities same or share some relation between them because I find the name for both these quantities being used inter-changeably at many places which is quite confusing and I believe they are not the same.

Also, I am confused which current is being referred to when on Internet I find the term "reverse saturation current". Searching on Internet the term "reverse saturation current" gives two kinds of sources: one referring it as IS and the other referring it as ICBO Another similar quantity is ICBO.

References

Sedra Smith
Donald Neamen
Here it is. The *reverse saturation current*, "Is", is the reverse current of the base-emitter junction. This is denoted as "Is" in a diode, a 2 terminal device.
But a bjt has 3 terminals, & 2 p-n junctions. The collector base jcn is reverse biased when bjt is biased in its active region. Without base current, the emitter current is the collector base jcn reverse saturation current. This can be regarded a "leakage current". This is "Ics", the collector base reverse saturation current.

The base emitter jcn has a reverse saturation current denoted by "Ies". This value, Ies, generally differs from Ics since collector & emitter regions have differing doping densities. The value Ies is the reverse current in a reverse biased base emitter junction with collector open.

The parameter "Icbo", is collector to emitter current with an open base. This is often regarded as leakage, since a bjt having no input on the base emitter junction, ie zero bias, should ideally have zero collector current Ic.

But the reverse biased c-b jcn has a small reverse current, Ics per Shockley diode eqn, or Icbo per bjt circuit models. Data sheets display this Ics/Icbo value generally.

The problem with most semiconductor theory textbooks is that of denoting b-e jcn reverse saturation current as "Is". For a diode, Is is fine. But bjt has 2 junctions, each with its own "Is" parameter. Good concise authors differentiate these values by denoting them as "Ics", & "Ies", wrt to collector base & base emitter junctions.

I hope I've helped.
 
  • Informative
  • Like
Likes anubhavsingh and berkeman
Thread 'Weird near-field phenomenon I get in my EM simulation'
I recently made a basic simulation of wire antennas and I am not sure if the near field in my simulation is modeled correctly. One of the things that worry me is the fact that sometimes I see in my simulation "movements" in the near field that seems to be faster than the speed of wave propagation I defined (the speed of light in the simulation). Specifically I see "nodes" of low amplitude in the E field that are quickly "emitted" from the antenna and then slow down as they approach the far...
Hello dear reader, a brief introduction: Some 4 years ago someone started developing health related issues, apparently due to exposure to RF & ELF related frequencies and/or fields (Magnetic). This is currently becoming known as EHS. (Electromagnetic hypersensitivity is a claimed sensitivity to electromagnetic fields, to which adverse symptoms are attributed.) She experiences a deep burning sensation throughout her entire body, leaving her in pain and exhausted after a pulse has occurred...
Back
Top