A voltage buffer amplifier is used to transfer a voltage from a first circuit, having a high output impedance level, to a second circuit with a low input impedance level.
If the voltage is transferred unchanged (the voltage gain Av is 1), the amplifier is a unity gain buffer; also known as a voltage follower because the output voltage follows or tracks the input voltage. Although the voltage gain of a voltage buffer amplifier may be (approximately) unity, it usually provides considerable current gain and thus power gain
A: Voltage follower imply that the output will follow the input without any gain.
Its purpose is to provide approximately the same voltage to a load as what is input to the amplifier, but at a much greater current. In other words, it has no voltage gain, but it does have current gain.
Because of the geometry of the common collector configuration, changes in base voltage appear at the emitter. Said another way, what happens at the base pretty much happens at the emitter, and the emitter can be said to "mirror" or "follow" the base. The emitter is a follower of the base, and the name emitter follower appeared and was used.
no difference between emiter follower and source follower
I think you mean a common emitter amplifier, which is an amplifier of voltage. Emitter-follower or common collector amplifiers are used to match impedances, or to amplify power or current. The emitter-follower is a type of common emitter circuit that has a resistor between the emitter and ground. The output signal is taken from the point between the emitter and its resistor.
A: Voltage follower imply that the output will follow the input without any gain.
altough voltage follower circuit provides output voltage which is in phase to input voltage as in noninverting amplifier but in unamplified form.
altough voltage follower circuit provides output voltage which is in phase to input voltage as in noninverting amplifier but in unamplified form.
altough voltage follower circuit provides output voltage which is in phase to input voltage as in noninverting amplifier but in unamplified form.
The voltage gain of an emitter follower is theoretically 1. In practice, due to losses, it is marginally less than one.
It is an amplifier that has no gain or a gain of one mainly used for isolation .
same as the given input..
The (Class C, Common Collector) Emitter Follower is used to amplify the available current from a voltage driving circuit that might be disturbed by the load impedance. If the actual voltage value is important, the emitter follower is often teamed up with an opamp which sets the emitter voltage based on the input voltage.
In a voltage follower, voltage gain is 1, with an offset of VB-E, and current gain is hFe, limited, of course, by the available current in the supply and by the rating of the transistor.
.7v less than unity for DC operation but unity for AC.
It's a buffer circuit - it provides a high impedance input, and low impedance output with ~ unity gain. If you have a circuit that cannot drive much power, you can use a voltage follower to help. Also, if the input or output of a circuit needs to stay a specific value, such as with filters, you can easily control this due to the isolation the voltage follower provides.
you can use an impedence converter or a voltage follower