Amy54
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what base-emitter voltage is needed for a current to flow through the trasnsistor?
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Amy54 said:what base-emitter voltage is needed for a current to flow through the trasnsistor?
Amy54 said:what base-emitter voltage is needed for a current to flow through the trasnsistor?
This was discussed in stewarcs's reference (see Base-Emitter Junction Details)cabraham said:0.65 V is a good first order approximation to use as a starting point.
CEL said:In reality, any forward voltage will make current flow from base to emitter, but low voltages will originate very small currents.
cabraham said:No matter what answer I give, someone can always "one up" me and add something I omitted. So allow me to return the favor. Even with a base-emitter forward voltage drop of *zero* volts (b-e short-circuited), some collector current will indeed flow. This is "Iceo", and if the base-emitter junction is open, the current is "Icbo". These are leakage currents from the reverse biased collector to base and emitter terminals.
I interpreted the OP's question from a practical utilitarian sense that one uses a transistor to obtain power gain greater than unity. If a low powered signal source such as a microcontroller, transducer, etc. is used to actuate a higher powered device such as a solenoid, lamp, motor, etc., operating a bjt with Ib = 250 nA, & Vbe = 0.40 V is of no practical use. It was understood by me that the OP intended for the bjt to do something useful. If the bjt application is that of linear amplification, the dc bias point, or "quiescent point", is generally in the neighborhood of 0.10 to 10 mA, and 0.60 to 0.70 V.
Unless one is using the bjt as the logging element in a logarithmic amp/converter, Vbe = 0.65 V give or take a tad, twice that for a Darlington, is where it operates. When using a bjt as a switch or an amplifier, the 0.65 V value for the Vbe forward drop is a *darn good* first order approximation. Peace and BR.
Claude