Hi Ratch,
it was just two days ago that something came into my mind:
There is a handwritten paper from Claude (a pdf copy must be somewhere on my hard disc) which contains a comprehensive calculation of a classical BJT amplifier with RE-stabilization.
Given are all resistor values, the ratio B=Ic/Ib and the supply voltage - nothing else. The task was to calculate the bias point.
Claude has done a very good job and he has found the correct solution.
Why is this worth mentioning? Because he has started the calculation assuming a constant voltage VBE=0.7 volts.
No surprise, because that is the only way to solve the task.
However, I ask myself: Why on earth is he continously claiming that VBE would be the RESULT of an injected current Ie ?
Because Vbe is the result of Ie! That is why I claim it, because it is so. Sir Oliver Heaviside's transmission line theory lays many perplexing questions to rest if properly applied. A switch is turned on and a power supply is up and running, let's call it Vcc, which supplies the bias for the bjt stage. A b-e junction is in series with a resistor. A Vcc supply powers the resistor and p-n junction. What happens?
Actually, let's reduce this to extreme simplicity, a battery, resistor, and diode. The switch is thrown, and the battery voltage is 12 volts, resistor is 1.0 kohm, and the diode is a garden variety 1N914, or any other you wish to use. Diode is oriented in forward direction. I don't need a pic. you can draw one, or just mentally visualize this case. So the switch is thrown, and the resistor-diode series combination now has 12 volts across it. What determines the current? The battery has very low internal resistance, consider it an ideal constant voltage source. The truth is that the diode has near zero volts across it, around 26 mV, due to thermal energy via lattice vibrations.
Consider the connecting wires a t-line, so the 12 volts travels through the t-line towards the R-D series network. The current is initially Vbatt/Zo, where Zo is the t-line characteristic impedance, which we can call 120 ohm for illustration. So I, the current, is 12.0V/120 ohm = 0.100A, or 100 mA. At the initial transit of charge from the battery, there is no feedback indicating that a 1.0 kohm R and a diode D lie ahead. This R-D network is not seen by the battery. The 12 volts and 100 mA travel in unison along the t-line and reach the R-D network at a speed just below that of light, maybe 50 to 80% of c.
But what happens when the charges reach the R-D network? We have an impedance transition from 120 ohm to 1,000 ohm plus the resistance of the diode. A reflection occurs, where the voltage reflects with a positive coefficient, current has negative. Some charge enters the R-D. When charges transit through the R, collisions between charge carriers (electrons, holes) and lattice ions occur. Ionization occurs, and electrons are dropped from conduction to the valence energy band. In accordance with conservation of energy law, CEL, photons are radiated per Planck's law E = hf. A resistor conducting current radiates heat, as we know.
So what happens when charges enter the crystal lattice structure of the diode? They have energy already, imparted by the battery's redox (reduction/oxidation) chemical reaction. The positive charges enter the p side (forward biased), and electrons enter n side. The depletion zone is as it was before the switch initiated the charge motion, Vt = 26 mV. The charges move straight through their respective n and p silicon regions. Why would they not? In p material, holes easily conduct, as they have high mobility being majority carriers. Likewise for electrons in the n region. So please note that charges conduct through the diode with ease in the forward direction without anything being done to the depletion zone. A hole entering a p region encounters little resistance since a hole has a statistically smaller chance of recombination vs. an electron, and vice-versa in n region.
Once the holes have transited through the p region, and electrons through n region, they cross the depletion zone and ionize with atoms in the local region, enhancing the depletion zone. The increased hole density from the battery has crossed into the n region and ionized local n region atoms, adding to the small ionization already present due to thermal energy. Likewise, in the p region, this new addition of electrons has increased the ionization. In p region, electrons have low mobility being minority carriers, and don't get far before recombination.
A stronger E field occurs in this new enhanced depletion zone, and the line integral of this larger E field is a larger barrier voltage. The diode forward voltage drop increased due to its increased forward current. The change in Id gave rise to a change in Vd. So now what happens?
New charges crossing the n and p regions will encounter this new increased barrier potential, this E field will oppose the E field from the battery. Charges in the vicinity feel the battery E field propelling them towards the diode junction, along with the barrier potential oriented oppositely, pushing against their motion. Thus the current begins to decrease due to the Vd build up. After several dozen or so t-line reflections, the equilibrium condition will be attained. The current will be determined by the net voltage on the R, which is 12.0-0.70 volts = 11.30 volts. So I = 11.30V/1.0 kohm = 11.3 mA.
The relation between V & I in the resistor R is too easy as R = V/I, I =V/R, and V = IR. But the diode behaves per Shockley, i.e. Vd = Vt*ln((Id/Is)+1), or Id = Is*exp((Vd/Vt)-1). One could attempt to solve the 2 equations, but the result is a transcendental equation, unsolvable. Math tables have been computed for similar type functions, one being a Lambert function. If temperature is very constant, Lambert functions can solve this equation. But for any significant power, the diode parameter "Is", the scaling or saturation current, has a strong temperature coefficient. Small changes in temp produce large changes in Ies.
But V is logarithmic wrt I in the diode, meaning that Vd does not change much as I varies slightly. At room temp, we know a priori that when the dust settles, Vd is not far from 0.60 to 0.70 volts. If we start at Vd = 0.70V, then Id = 11.3 mA. If Vd = 0.60V, then Vd = 11.4 mA, a change of just 1%. Otherwise we would have to iteratively compute via Ohm's law and Shockley to get the result.
Spice type simulators do just that. If I assume 0.70V, get 11.3 mA, then plug the network into Spice, it may compute, Vd = 0.677 V, and Id = 11.323 mA. My error would be -0.2%, not bad.
Although Vbe in the bjt amp stage commences at 26 mV, then climbs up to near 0.70 volts after current has been passed through the junction, I know from past observation, that at the current levels in question, the Vbe will lie in the range of 0.60 to 0.70 volts. So I was leveraging this repeatable property of b-e junctions to estimate the forward drop at 0.70 volts.
Once all transients settle, Vbe will be pretty close to that value. I also allow a tolerance, computing the network with 0.60 volts Vbe, and obtaining results based on that value. I vary Vbe from 0.50 to 0.80 volts, vary beta from worst case min at min temp, up to worst case max at max temp, then compute. I then observe the spread in gain values. A well designed amp stage is robust enough to maintain consistent performance despite Vbe and beta variations.
Do I need to elaborate? BR.
Claude
