- #36
The Electrician
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GreenPrint said:Why shouldn't I include [itex]R_{S}[/itex] in my analysis? Don't I have to take into consideration the current flowing through it? I'm confused about just getting rid of them. I learned something called the node voltage method a while ago.
There won't be any current flowing in Rs because there won't be a voltage applied at Vs when you're calculating Vo/VI; the left end of Rs won't be connected to anything.
When the question asks for Vo/VI, it's saying in effect, "If some test voltage is applied to the base of the first transistor, what is the output voltage of the circuit?" If we've already calculated the ratio Av = Vo/VI, and now we have some new applied voltage Vin, we can find Vo due to this new applied voltage by just multiplying Vin by Av.
If the question asks for Vo/Vs, it's saying "If some test voltage Vs is applied to the left end of Rs, what is the output voltage?". But, when it asks for Vo/VI, it is assumed that no test voltage Vs is applied; only a test voltage VI is applied then.
The calculation of a voltage gain assumes that some node of the circuit is the place where the test signal is applied. That node is the denominator of the fraction defining Av; it would be Vs if we want Vo/Vs, or it would be VI if we want Vo/VI.
So, if what is wanted is Vo/VI, we want to know what the output voltage is when a test signal is applied to the base of the first transistor. Unless the left end of Rs is connected to something, it isn't involved at all. If you're applying a (mathematical) test signal at the base of the transistor, you don't want to also have an extraneous signal applied at Vs.
A choice must be made; is the gain wanted starting from the left end of Rs, or from the base of the transistor? You can't calculate the gain when two test signals are applied simultaneously, one at each point.
If the gain is wanted from the base of the transistor, then Vs and Rs shouldn't even be shown on the schematic; in that case, they're just confusion factors.
GreenPrint said:I also think it's a bit silly solving this question as it seems to be a question in algebra. I do have access to MATLAB at my school. My calculator is a TI-84 so it can perform those tasks, and during the test I didn't have access to a computer.
There's definitely a considerable amount of algebra involved, but I think you're having problems setting up the equations, without even considering the algebra to follow.