Who cares who he is?
You're another foreigner. In American usage, that is a declarative and not an interrogative.
Who cares who he is?
Okay, great! Thanks.Yup, back-to-back diodes, with the lower one about a 6 volt zener. And
the mentioned controlled current sink (whose gain rolls off at high
frequencies and low temperatures.) Add some capacitances, and some
emitter series resistance, and that covers 98% of the cases. Add in a
little output slope (the Early voltage) and some leakage if it matters,
which it usually doesn't.
Static beta, aka hFE (not hfe!) is on basically all bipolar transistor
data sheets. The other h-params rarely are.
here:========================================================
On Sat, 13 Oct 2012 17:24:52 -0700 (PDT),
Yeah, mostly older. Of the transistors that we use, most data sheets
have hFE, and only one out of the dozen that I checked had any other
h-params.
http://www.centralsemi.com/PDFs/products/2n3903.pdf
http://www.fairchildsemi.com/ds/2N/2N3904.pdf
==============================================================
"They" is plural. hFE is singular. We call it "beta." The point of
this thread isn't whether beta is on data sheets; the question asked
was whether anybody actually uses h-paramater analysis, as is taught
in university courses.
Just hFE isn't enough to do the academic matrix h-param stuff. So the
answer to the OP is "nobody here seems to use it."
He's been polite, and the question about h-params was reasonable.
He's no Indian- and his conversation has been nothing but broad innuendo and
generalities. His understanding of meritocracy is that of classic white
trash American, that's the main giveaway, but you're the same so you didn't
pick up on it.
Gee whiz, you sound like a round-the-bend angry s**t slinger. STFU.
It doesn't matter much. hfe and hFE are similar, because transistors
are fairly linear as current amplifiers. The range of beta on a data
sheet might be 5:1 min/max, or some min and no specified max, so most
people go with the min and try to design circuits that are tolerant of
anything better. So this is rough stuff, not rocket science, so a lot
of fancy math (like formal h-param matrix stuff) isn't justified.
I still remember that day (I must have been 11 or 12) when I finished
assembling my Knight-kit oscilloscope, the first DC-coupled scope I'd
ever had access to. I rigged it up to sweep the base current of a
transistor and plot Ic vs Ib. It was a straight line. Something dawned
on me that instant.
I did a search and found that you are correct about hfe/Hfe/hFE. I had
no idea that the capitalization meant anything. For all these years I
thought hfe was just hfe. My mistake.
Phil Hobbs wrote:
Re prototyping: Datasheets have deteriorated so very badly that prototyping is
more necessary now than it was 10 years ago, IME. JL mentioned the problem of RF
parts having very few DC specs, which is one I run into all the time. I also do
a lot of niche things, e.g. using an SA614 limiter/detector IC with its RSSI
output wrapped round to the gate of a MOSFET variable attenuator, to get wider
dynamic range in a tactical optical communications system for DARPA. Youcan't
do that based on data sheets, or even SPICE models--you have to prototype, and do
intelligent engineering characterization to make sure it'll work in the corner
cases, e.g. high temperature, strong signals, bright sunlight right in the field
of view.
So I do a fair amount of prototyping--overall, I probably spend almost asmuch
time on protos as on Spice, but less than I do on analysis or on actual
schematics.
But then I'm a physicist.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
There is no need to apologize and you didn't make a mistake because for practical purposes the ac-current gain and so-called static current gain are identical. This follows because IC in ratio to IB by factor hFE makes deviation in IC, ic, to deviation in IB, ib, that same ratio, of hfe=hFE. This is why the only distinction between hFE and hfe is one of analytical notation, and /also/ why the datasheet specification is so widely used for both. And this has nothing to do with hFE variation with VCE, Early effect, and level of current injection IB.
Hey, it's only a newsgroup. It's not life.
Hey, it's only a newsgroup. It's not life.
If you mean hFE and hfe, they are different. It's rare to see both on
a data sheet, but when you do, they are often different.
of courseOooh boy, here we go again...different only in definition, but identical numerically.
Phil said:Yo' mama. (How's that for American?) ;0
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
....Phil wrote a great book on electro-optical design, with a goodly bit of
low-noise electronics included.
He also serves as our reference LPTM (Large Physicist Test Mass).
They are distinct. If you try building amplifiers that really need to
be linear over wide ranges of collector current, the distinction is
vital.
One of the major limitations of laser noise canceller performance at low
frequency is beta nonlinearity, i.e. 1/h_FE - 1/h_fe.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
Can I have the current picture in the developed countries on h-
parameters? I believe, with so much computing power at their hands,
people should not use h-parameters nowadays. They have no reason to. In
case of complex circuitry, you could do simulations, and in practice, you
use ICs in place of transistors. what is your experience with hybrid
parameters? Could you discuss this with people in the univ. laboratories?
I would mention an important aspect which intrigued me
while I was studying in Univ. The theory books put so much emphasis on
hybrid parameters, but to me, they are good for later analysis, i.e.,
not to invent something new, but when invented, they try to find how
the system work, not for learning electronics principles. And also, in the
practical world I did not come across specific cases of using
h-parameters. I thought - such wastage of time and effort!
No, hFE is a DC measurement (Ic/Ib) and hfe is small-signal, the slope
of Ic/Ib at some operating point. They are usually similar, but on
data sheets that show both, they are often numerically different.
But since nobody here uses small-signal h-params, it doesn't matter
much.
While i have used h-paramters for design, it is very uncommon. It can be
useful for composing sectional (or block) designs. Not all that useful
for designing less than four transistors worth. H-parameters are sort of
a co-delopment with the Eberly and Gummel-Poon physics based models
(SPICE) to some extent. See if you can find a GE transistor manual 7th
edition (best of breed) for a helpful discussion about various early
transistor amplifier models.
?-)
On Mon, 15 Oct 2012 12:06:15 -0400, Phil Hobbs
On 10/15/2012 11:57 AM, Jim Thompson wrote:
On Mon, 15 Oct 2012 11:45:27 -0400, Phil Hobbs
[snip]
And h parameters don't actually simplify anything, anyway. They were
originally touted as a way to get round the measurement problems of y
and z parameters, namely oscillation on the one hand and RC rolloff on
the other.
But all they are is a way of organizing a whole two (2) linearized,
frequency independent approximate equations for a transistor circuit
that is far better described by hybrid-pi. The labour saving is
trivial, far less than the effort required to calculate the stupid
things in the first place.
Honestly, folks, is h_re really more useful than VAF? VAF and C_CB are
actually a decent first cut at predicting low frequency
reverse-transfer behaviour over a wide range of conditions, which h_re
isn't.
H-parameters are textbook curiosities.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
So are PhD's ;-)
Seriously, VAF is just a parameter in another STYLE of modeling. And
math is math is math. "Textbook curiosities" tweak the mind to think
of alternate solutions to untenable problems.
...Jim Thompson
Sure thing. But it's a reasonable approximation over a wide range,
because it's physics-based. h_re depends linearly on collector current,
for a start.
And at least I'm not in a _pathology_ texbook.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
h-parameters can be complex math expressions, not just fixed numbers.
...Jim Thompson
Sure again. But then where's the benefit? A 2x2 matrix written out
with all sorts of algebra and stuff sort of defeats the point of the
exercise--it's far clearer just to write it out the usual way.
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
The 'benefit' is the ability to easily model things that don't yet
have models. Let the simulator cope with the Algebra.
...Jim Thompson