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Lecture 4: Small-Signal Diode Model and Its Application

The document discusses the small-signal model of diodes for analyzing circuits with time-varying signals. It introduces the concept of separating analysis into DC and small AC components. The diode is modeled as a resistor equal to the inverse slope of the I-V curve at the operating point. An example calculates the AC voltage across a diode under small-signal assumptions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
872 views9 pages

Lecture 4: Small-Signal Diode Model and Its Application

The document discusses the small-signal model of diodes for analyzing circuits with time-varying signals. It introduces the concept of separating analysis into DC and small AC components. The diode is modeled as a resistor equal to the inverse slope of the I-V curve at the operating point. An example calculates the AC voltage across a diode under small-signal assumptions.

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9013227246
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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You are on page 1/ 9

Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 1 of 9

2009 Keith W. Whites


Lecture 4: Small-Signal Diode Model
and Its Application.

The diode analysis so far has focused only on DC signals. We
must also consider the application of diodes in circuits with time
varying signals. This analysis is also complicated by the
nonlinear nature of the diode.

Large signal analysis of diode circuits is often best left for
circuit simulation packages. Conversely, small signal analysis
of nonlinear diode circuits can sometimes be done by hand.

The concept behind 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.

Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 2 of 9
For example:
(Fig. 3.17a)
where v
d
(t) is some time varying waveform, perhaps periodic
such as a sinusoid or triangle signal.

The purpose of V
D
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.
(Fig. 3.17b)
Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 3 of 9
The total voltage at any time t is the sum of the DC and AC
components

( ) ( )
D D d
v t V v t = + (3.10),(1)
provided the AC signal is small enough that the diode operates
approximately in a linear fashion. (See Section 1.4.9 for a
discussion on the symbol convention used in your text.)

The diode current is (3.1) with
( )
D S
i t I >> such that

( )
( )

( )
D d D
T T T
D
v t v t V
nV nV nV
D S S
I
i t I e I e e
=
=
or
( )
( )
d
T
v t
nV
D D
i t I e = (3.12),(2)
where I
D
is the DC diode current.

We can series expand the exponential term using

2
1
2!
x
x
e x = + + +
and if v
d
(t) is small enough so that
( ) ( )
2
d T
v t nV << , truncate
the series to two terms:

( )
( )
1
d
T
v t
nV d
T
v t
e
nV
+ (3)
Substituting (3) in (2) gives

( ) ( )
D
D D d
T
I
i t I v t
nV
+ (3.14),(4)

Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 4 of 9
So, if v
d
(t) is small enough we can see from this last equation
that i
D
is the sum (or superposition) of two components: DC and
AC signals. What weve done is to linearize the problem by
limiting the AC portion of v
D
to small values.

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

T
d
D
nV
r
I
[] (3.18),(5)
From a physical viewpoint, r
d
is the inverse slope of the tangent
line at a particular bias point along the characteristic curve of the
diode. Note that r
d
changes depending on the (DC) bias:

(Note that this r
d
is a fundamentally different quantity than r
D

used in the PWL model of the diode discussed in the previous
lecture.)

The equivalent circuit for the small-signal operation of diodes is:
Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 5 of 9

Because we have linearized the operation of the diode (by
restricting the analysis to small AC signals), we can use
superposition to analyze the composite DC and AC signals.

That is, signal analysis is performed by eliminating all DC
sources (short out DC voltage sources/open circuit DC current
sources) and replacing the diode with its small-signal resistance
r
d
.

This process is illustrated below:
D
R
v
s
+
-
+
-
V
DD
i
D
=I
D
+i
d
v
D
=V
D
+v
d
AC (signal)
DC (bias)
R
+
-
V
DD
I
D
V
D
Ideal
V
D0
r
D
R
v
s
+
-
+
-
i
d
r
d
d
d s
d
r
v v
r R
=
+
AC only: rides on V
D
.


Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 6 of 9
Example N4.1 (Text example 3.6). For the circuit shown below,
determine v
D
when
( )
10 1 cos 2 60 V t
+
= + V.

V
+
t
2 V
10 V
Called ripple if one
desires purely DC.
T=1/f=1/60 s

The diode specifications are
0.7-V drop at 1 mAdc
n =2.

As we discussed, for small AC signals we can separate the DC
analysis from the AC (i.e., linearized). We need to start with the
DC bias. Assuming 0.7
D
V V for a silicon diode the DC
current is

10 0.7
0.93
10,000
D
I

= = mA
Since 1
D
I mA, then V
D
will be very close to the assumed
value.

At this DC bias, then the small-signal resistance at the Q point is

3
3
2 25 10
53.8
0.93 10
T
d
D
nV
r
I


= = =


Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 7 of 9
We use this r
d
as the equivalent resistance in the small-signal
model of the diode

The AC voltage across the diode is found from voltage division
as
( ) ( )
( )
53.8
cos
10,000 53.8 10,000
5.35cos mV
d
d s
d
r
v t v t
r
t

= =
+ +
=

The corresponding phasor diode voltage is then
5.35
d
v = mV
p
=10.70 mV
pp
where the subscript p indicates a peak value and the pp
subscript means a peak-to-peak value.

Were we justified in using a small-signal assumption for this
problem? From page 3, lets check if
( ) ( )
2
d T
v t nV << :

3
3
5.35 10
0.107
2 25 10
d
T
v
nV

= =


which is much less than 2. So, yes, the small-signal assumption
is valid here.

As an aside, note that in this circuit the ripple in the voltage has
been reduced at the output. At the input, the ripple is 2/10=20%
Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 8 of 9
of the DC component while at the output the ripple is
0.0107/0.7=1.5% of the DC component.

See text example 3.7 for another example of this ripple
reduction.


Diode High Frequency Model

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

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.
p
n
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
V
S
C
j
+
-
I
-
+
C
d
+ -
v
s

Within the device and the depletion region there exists an
electric field, as discussed in Lecture 2. For AC signals, this
electric field is varying with time.

Whites, EE 320 Lecture 4 Page 9 of 9
As youve learned in electromagnetics, a time varying electric
field is a displacement current. The effects of a displacement
current are modeled by equivalent circuit capacitances:
r
d
C
d
C
j

We wont do anything with this effect now. This is presented
primarily as an FYI. (However, later in the course we will
investigate this capacitive junction effect in transistors and how
it affects the gain of transistor amplifier circuits at high
frequencies.)

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