On Tue, 16 Oct 2012 19:49:03 -0400, Jamie
John Larkin wrote:
On Oct 16, 1:31 pm, John Larkin <jlar...@highlandtechnology.com>
wrote:
On Tue, 16 Oct 2012 09:17:50 -0700 (PDT), catty wu
I'm working on a school project to detect the weak e-field(<1000V/m).
I want to use the FET. But I just don't know what kind of FETshould I
choose. Can anyone help me? Thanks a lot!
A 2N7000 is amazing. I posted about some tricks you can do with one...
you might search google groups for "larkin" and "2n7000" (or maybe it
was 2N7002?)
The 2n7002 is the SMT part.
It's a very neat part, but the input capacitance is an order of
magnitude higher than a small-geometry JFET. The input's effectively
capacitively coupled to the world, so Cin attenuates the input voltage
accordingly.
___
\ /
*
| C(ant) |--
'---||--+--->|
| |--
---
--- Cin
|
===
James
Sure, but that's no big problem if you're hunting macro amounts of
charge.
In my little fet-LED setup, you could use a pencil or a tiny insulated
screwdriver to transfer charge packets into/out of the gate, in
visible steps.
Or use a source follower config to bootstrap the g-s capacitance. The
cool thing about these parts is that they cost a few cents and the
gate leaks electrons per second. For a reasonable e-field measurement,
you'd probably want to swamp the Cgate with an external capacitor.
they maybe cheap but with my older eyes, they are becoming harder to
work with.
2N7000 is a TO-92, which is easy to work with.
https://dl.dropbox.com/u/53724080/Parts/2N7000.jpg
This is a 2N7000, a resistor, a battery, and an LED. The gate is
floating, and the fet is halfway on [1]. You can do cute tricks, like
turning the LED on or off with your fingers, transferring charge with
small objects, or calculating gate leakage over hours or days.
One added RC and a pushbutton makes a three-state on/bright/dim night
light.
[1] briefly connect drain to gate to get halfway on.