h parameters of common emiter in terms of common base and viceversa
In whch emitter is cmmön.input is taken frm base nd output is obtaind acros collector.
it is one of the configuration of BJT ,which is achieved by making the BASE grounded(i.e common base).Here the emmiter serves as the input and collector as the output.
Slightly less than cc configuration but greater than cb
Common base connection.
common emitter using fixed bias
there are 3 types of configuratons......they are 1.common emmiter configuration 2.common collector configuration 3.common base configuration
In whch emitter is cmmön.input is taken frm base nd output is obtaind acros collector.
it is one of the configuration of BJT ,which is achieved by making the BASE grounded(i.e common base).Here the emmiter serves as the input and collector as the output.
Common Emitter Configuration has maximum impedance.
The input current of transistor is approximately equal to output current .Suppose in common base configuration the emmiter current is approximately equal to collector current if neglect the very small value of bae current.Even though the input resistance is not equal to output resistance,the currents are same ,so we can reliase that the transistor transfers resistance to get same currents at both ends.
It can be used in 3 configurations, common emmiter, common base, common collector, in which common emitter is most widely used configuration.Its a 3 terminal device.It can be use as an amplifiersIt is use in all digital logic familiesHigh input impedence; low output impedence
BOTH Li and Na have ns1 in common which comes at last of their electronic configuration as they belong to IA subgroup.
common emitter configuration is use for amplification purpose while common collector is use as buffer as its op is same as ip..
Their electron configuration =)
sysedit
Li, Be, O: the first term in the abridged electron configuration is [He]. Ca, K: the first term in the abridged electron configuration is [Ar].
The element of oxygen has ozone as one of its allotropes. Another is diatomic oxygen, which is the more common version; less common allotropes include a four-atom configuration and an eight-atom configuration.