Transistors:
A transistor regulates current or voltage flow and acts as a switch or gate for electronic signals. A transistor consists of three layers of a semiconductor material, each capable of carrying a current. A semiconductor is a material such as germanium and silicon that conducts electricity in a "semi-enthusiastic" way. It's somewhere between a real conductor such as copper and an insulator (like the plastic wrapped around wires).
The semiconductor material is given special properties by a chemical process called doping. The doping results in a material that either adds extra electrons to the material (which is then called N-type for the extra negative charge carriers) or creates "holes" in the material's crystal structure (which is then called P-type because it results in more positive charge carriers). The transistor's three-layer structure contains an N-type semiconductor layer sandwiched between P-type layers (a PNP configuration) or a P-type layer between N-type layers (an NPN configuration).
A small change in the current or voltage at the inner semiconductor layer (which acts as the control electrode) produces a large, rapid change in the current passing through the entire component. The component can thus act as a switch, opening and closing an electronic gate many times per second. Today's computers use circuitry made with complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology. CMOS uses two complementary transistors per gate (one with N-type material; the other with P-type material). When one transistor is maintaining a logic state, it requires almost no power.
Transistors are the basic elements in integrated circuits (ICs), which consist of very large numbers of transistors interconnected with circuitry and baked into a single silicon microchip or chip.
Common Features of Transistors:
The word “transistor” was coined to describe the operation of a “transfer resistor”. First, a point contact transistor was produced. It included two diodes placed very closely together such that the current in either diode had an important effect upon the current in the other diode. By the proper biasing the diodes, it was possible to obtain power amplification of electric signals between the diode common layer, which lead was called a base,and other layers. One of the leads of this device was designated as an emitter, the corresponding diode was biased in the forward direction, the other was
a collector and its diode was biased in the reverse direction. Power amplification was obtained by virtue of the fact that the few variations in the base current caused a large variation in the emitter-collector current. The point-contact transistor had certain drawbacks:
- High sensitivity to temperature, either ambient or self-generated;
- Production problems, i.e., a difficulty to reproduce the same electrical qualities in close tolerance for mass production.
-Low amplification, especially at high frequencies.
Intensive research has been done to diminish or remove these drawbacks. As a result, developers have produced semiconductor materials that are not so sensitive to temperature, inexpensive, operate at high frequencies, have low power dissipation, and internal noise of the transistor. A device, which is more stable both mechanically and electrically, has been constructed by forming junctions rather than point contacts. General classes of transistors that are used in electronics today are as follows:
- Bipolar junction transistors (BJT).
- Junction field-effect transistors (JFET).
- Metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFET) up to some kilowatts, hundreds amperes, and tenths gigahertz.
- Insulated-gate bipolar transistors (IGBT) up to thousands of kilowatts, some kiloamperes,
and hundreds kilohertz.
More powerful devices have been built on the thyristors though IGBTs have the potential to
replace them.
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