pinagdugtong na madaming amplifier
The signal gain of a CE BJT amplifier is hFe or collector resistance divided by emitter resistance, whichever is less.
same as you would using an NPN, except the supply voltages are reversed
aries.ucsd.edu/NAJMABADI/CLASS/ECE65/06-W/NOTES/BJT3.pdf
The base-emitter voltage of a BJT is dependent on temperature and current. The minimum voltage ranges from 0.6V to 0.7V. Anything less, and the transistor goes into cutoff. As far as "proper voltage" is concerned, it is more correct to say "proper current", because that is the basis for the BJT - it is a current amplifier, not a voltage amplifier. The proper current depends on the particular biasing design of the circuit at hand.
It can take a lot of capacitance to present a low impedance to a low frequency. Electrolytics offer lots of capacitance for a low price.
Darlington amplifier has more gain when compared to cascade amplifier .
In a cascade amplifier, two identical or non identical amplifiers are cascaded ,i.e., connected in series through a capacitor. They are mostly common emitter amplifiers that are cascaded together.The final gain of the cascaded amplifier is the product of the first amplifier's gain and the second amplifier's gain. However, the bandwidth of the cascaded version becomes lesser than the individual gains.
The signal gain of a CE BJT amplifier is hFe or collector resistance divided by emitter resistance, whichever is less.
the common collector can use as voltage buffer
In electronics, a common-emitter amplifier is one of three basic single-stage bipolar-junction-transistor (BJT) amplifier topologies, typically used as a voltage amplifier. In this circuit the base terminal of the transistor serves as the input, the collector is the output, and the emitter is common to both (for example, it may be tied to ground reference or a power supply rail), hence its name.
very simple, zero.
You can use an npn or a pnp bjt in a common emitter amplifier circuit. The decision of which one to use is based on whether you want the collector and base to be more positive (npn) or more negative (pnp) than the emitter.
aplied weak input signal is amplied at output side due to very high resistence
The Class A common emitter BJT design has input on the base and output on the collector. This design is inverting, or 180 degrees phase shift.
same as you would using an NPN, except the supply voltages are reversed
gm0 is not used in BJT amplifier circuits; it is used in JFET circuits. It is the transconductance at zero gate bias. Since the transconductance varies as the bias is varied, this gives a benchmark level at a given defined point, and other transconductances can be calculated from it as a function of the amount of negative bias on the gate. If it were linear it would be the same everywhere, but it is not.
aries.ucsd.edu/NAJMABADI/CLASS/ECE65/06-W/NOTES/BJT3.pdf