Thursday, 4 April 2013

SMALL SIGNAL MODEL OF DIODE



Small-signal operation is that a time varying signal with small amplitude “rides” on a DC value that may or may not be large.



The analysis of the circuit is then divided into two parts:

  1. DC “bias”

  2. AC “signal” of small amplitude.
and the solutions are added together using superposition.

SMALL SIGNAL MODEL

where vd(t) is some time varying waveform, perhaps periodic such as a sinusoidal or triangular signal.

The purpose of VD in this circuit is to set the operation of the diode about a
point on the forward bias i-v characteristic curve of the diode. This is called the quiescent point, or Q point, and the process of setting these DC values is called biasing the diode.
 The total voltage at any time t is the sum of the DC and AC components
                       vD ( t ) = VD + vd ( t )

provided the AC signal is small enough that the diode operates approximately in a linear region.The diode current is iD ( t ) >> IS such that

iD ( t ) ≈ IS e vD ( t ) /ηVT = IS e ( ( VD + vd ( t )  ) / ηVT )

         = ISe e ( VD/ ηVT. e ( vd ( t ) ) /ηV)

         = ID . e ( vd ( t )  /ηVT )

Where ID is the DC diode current

By expanding the exponential term and neglecting high order terms

iD ( t ) = ID . ( 1 + vd ( t ) ) /ηVT )

So, if vd(t) is small enough we can see from this last equation that iD is the sum (or superposition) of two components: DC and AC signals. What we’ve done is to linearize the problem by limiting the AC portion of vD to small values.

The term nVT / I D has units of ohms. It is called the diode small-signal resistance:

                                                   rd = ηVT / I

From a physical viewpoint,   rd is the inverse slope of the tangent line at a particular bias point along the characteristic curve of the diode. Note that rd changes depending on the (DC) bias




This purely resistive AC model for the diode works well when the frequency of the AC signals is sufficiently low.

HIGH FREQUENCY
At high frequencies, we need to include the effects that arise due to these time varying signals and the charge separation that exists in the depletion region and in the bulk p and n regions of the diode under forward bias conditions.
As you’ve learned in electromagnetics, a time varying electric field is a displacement current. The effects of a displacement current are modeled by equivalent circuit capacitances


3 Responses to “SMALL SIGNAL MODEL OF DIODE”

class representative said...
30 July 2014 at 14:55

thank u sir for helping as for doing our project


Anonymous said...
5 February 2017 at 09:04

Small signal low frequency model


Anonymous said...
5 February 2017 at 09:05

Small signal low frequency model


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