Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Electronics: Analog and Digital, Second Edition Copyright Preface Preface to the First Edition 1. Se miconductors, Diodes and Diode Circuits
1.1 INTRODUCTION TO ELECTRONICS 1.2 TYPICAL ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS 1.3 CLASSIFICATION OF ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS AND DEVICES 1.4 CONDUCTION IN SOLIDS
Conduction in Metals Semiconductors
1.5 DOPED SEMICONDUCTORS
Diffusion Hall Effect
1.6 JUNCTION DIODES
Junction Formation Technology pn-Junction Behaviour IV Characteristic of a Diode Junction Breakdown Diode Circuit Model
1.7 DC CIRCUIT ANALYSIS OF DIODE CIRCUITS 1.8 ZENER DIODE VOLTAGE REGULATOR 1.9 DIODE CIRCUITS WITH TIME-VARYING SOURCES 1.10 TRANSITION AND DIFFUSION CAPACITANCES 1.11 SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS OF A DIODE 1.12 SPECIAL PURPOSE DIODES
Tunnel Diode Metal-semiconductor Diode (Schottky Diode) Photodiodes Light Emitting Diode (LED) Solar Cells
1.13 RECTIFIERS
Half-Wave Rectifier Full-Wave Rectifier Bridge Rectifier
1.14 FILTERS
Capacitor Filter Capacitor-Input and Choke-Input Filter
1.15 SOME DIODE WAVE SHAPING CIRCUITS
Voltage Multiplier Circuit Clipping Circuit Clamping Circuits
1.16 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
2. T ransistors and Integrated Circuits
2.1 INTRODUCTION
Amplifying Action of Devices (Controlled Sources)
2.2 JUNCTION FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR (JFET) AND METAL OXIDE SEMICONDUCTOR FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTOR (MOSFET)
Junction Field Effect Transistor (JFET) Ohmic region Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor (MOSFET) Enhancement MOSFET (EMOSFET) Depletion Enhancement MOSFET (DEMOSFET) Transfer Characteristics MOS Terminology Comparison of PMOS and NMOS Transistors
2.3 BIPOLAR JUNCTION TRANSISTOR (BJT)
Fabrication Operation Common Base (CB) Configuration Common Emitter (CE) Configuration Operating Modes BJT as a Switch Darlington Transistor (pair)
2.4 INTEGRATED DEVICES AND CIRCUITS MANUFACTURE
Wafers (chips, slices, disks) First Operation Epitaxial Growth Diffusion Ion Implantation Fabrication of JFETs Fabrication of MOSFETs Fabrication of BJT Fabrication of Passive Components Integrated Circuits (ICs) Fabrication Process Some Examples of IC Technology
2.5 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES
Case of Non-ideal Transistor
PROBLEMS
3. S mall-Signal Models, Amplification and Biasing
3.1 INTRODUCTION 3.2 IDEALIZED TRANSISTOR MODELS
Bipolar Junction Transistor JFETs and MOSFETs
3.3 HYBRID-$pi$$ MODEL
Bipolar Junction Transistors Field Effect Transistors
3.4 h-PARAMETER MODEL
Determination of h-parameters Symbolization of Transistor Quantities Input and output impedances (Resistances)
3.5 TRANSISTOR BIASING
BJT Biasing Fixed Bias Thermal Instability (run-away) Signal Distortion Caused by Fixed Biasing Potential Divider and Self Bias Biasing Circuit with Voltage Feedback FET Biasing JFETs MOSFETs Constant Current Source BJT Circuit JFET Circuit
3.6 INTEGRATED CIRCUIT BIASING 3.7 BIAS DESIGN, AC GAIN, INPUT/OUTPUT IMPEDANCES
BJT FET
3.8 SOME SPECIAL CIRCUITS
Emitter Follower Amplifier Source Follower (Common Drain Amplifier) Common-Base (CB) Configuration Common-Gate Circuit Difference Amplifier
3.9 DARLINGTON PAIR
Bias Analysis AC Analysis
3.10 FEEDBACK PAIR
DC Analysis AC Analysis
3.11 EMITTER COUPLED PAIR
Applications Amplification Factor
3.12 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES
Digital Circuit Application Analog Circuit Applications
PROBLEMS
4. S mall-Signal Amplifiers: Frequency Response
4.1 INTRODUCTION
Amplification and Distortion Certain Basic Amplifier Considerations
4.2 SINGLE-STAGE RC-COUPLED AMPLIFIER
Frequency Response (Typical) The General Amplifier Typical Amplifier Circuits Small-Signal Model Analysis of Series and Parallel RC Circuits
4.3 FREQUENCY RESPONSE
Midfrequency Analysis Low Frequency Analysis Effect of Coupling Capacitors Effect of Bypass Capacitors Complete Low Frequency Response High Frequency Response High Frequency Circuit Analysis Input/Output Impedances
4.4 TUNED AMPLIFIER 4.5 MULTISTAGE AMPLIFIERS
Amplifiers in Cascade Gain Bandwidth Product
4.6 CASCODE AMPLIFIER (CE-CB CONFIGURATION)
DC Analysis AC Analysis High-frequency Response
4.7 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
5. La rge-Signal Amplifiers
5.1 AMPLIFIER CLASSES 5.2 CLASS-A POWER AMPLIFIERS
Series-fed Class-A Amplifier Maximum Power and Efficiency
5.3 TRANSFORMER-COUPLED POWER AMPLIFIER 5.4 CLASS-B POWER AMPLIFIERS
Push-pull Amplifiers Push-Pull Signals
5.5 COMPLEMENTARY-SYMMETRY CIRCUITS 5.6 DISTORTION IN AMPLIFIERS
Nonlinear or Amplitude Distortion Harmonic Distortion Distortion in Class-AB and Class-B Crossover Distortion Noise
5.7 CLASS-AB AMPLIFIERS 5.8 CLASS-C POWER AMPLIFIERS
Tank Circuit Operation Signal Biasing Class D Amplifier
5.9 NEW POWER TRANSISTORS
Power MOSFET Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor (IGBT)
5.10 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
6. Feedba ck Amplifiers and Oscillators
6.1 FEEDBACK CONCEPTS
Block Diagram Representation of a Feedback Amplifier
6.2 TYPE OF FEEDBACK CIRCUITS
Voltage Series Feedback Voltage Shunt Feedback Current Series Feedback Current Shunt Feedback
6.3 BLOCK DIAGRAM REPRESENTATION OF FEEDBACK AMPLIFIERS 6.4 EFFECT OF FEEDBACK ON IMPEDANCES
Input Impedance Output Impedance
6.5 SOME NEGATIVE FEEDBACK CIRCUITS
Voltage Series Feedback Voltage Shunt Feedback
6.6 PROPERTIES OF NEGATIVE FEEDBACK
Reduction in Frequency Distortion Reduction in Nonlinear Distortion and Noise Effect of Negative Feedback on Gain and Bandwidth Gain Stability with Feedback
6.7 STABILITY IN FEEDBACK AMPLIFIERS 6.8 OSCILLATOR OPERATION 6.9 PHASE SHIFT OSCILLATORS
FET Phase Shift Oscillator BJT Phase Shift Oscillator
6.10 WEIN BRIDGE OSCILLATOR 6.11 TUNED OSCILLATORS
Transistor Colpitts Oscillator Transistor Hartley Oscillator
6.12 CRYSTAL OSCILLATORS
Miller Crystal-controlled Oscillator
6.13 UNIJUNCTION OSCILLATOR
Unijunction Transistor (UJT) UJT Relaxation Oscillator
6.14 PHASE-LOCKED LOOP (PLL)
PLL Operation
PROBLEMS
7. O perational Amplifiers
7.1 INTRODUCTION 7.2 BASIC OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER
General Features of OPAMP Operational Amplifier Architecture OPAMP Parameters Frequency Response Slew Rate
7.3 DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER
Analysis of Differential Amplifier FET Version of Differential Amplifier Representation of Differential Amplifier
7.4 BASIC OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT
Inverting Amplifier Virtual Ground Practical inverting OPAMP Circuit Noninverting Amplifier Practical noninverting stage
7.5 APPLICATIONS OF OPAMPs 7.6 LINEAR APPLICATIONS OF OPAMPs
Adder or Summing Amplifier Subtractor Voltage Follower Current to Voltage Converter (Transresistance Amplifier) Voltage to Current Converter (Transconductance Amplifier) Constant Voltage Source Integrator Differentiator OPAMP Circuits with Frequency Sensitive Elements
7.7 OPAMP FILTERS (ACTIVE FILTERS)
Low-pass Filter High-pass Filter Band-reject Filter Band-pass Filter Band-pass Filter Using Single OPAMP
7.8 NONLINEAR APPLICATIONS OF OPAMPs
Comparator Window Comparator (Sense Amplifier) Logarithmic Amplifier Square Wave Generator Triangular Wave Generator
7.9 ANALOG SIMULATION 7.10 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
8. Digital Logic and Circuits
8.1 INTRODUCTION 8.2 SWITCHING AND LOGIC LEVELS
BJT Inverter Transfer Characteristic and Noise Margin MOS Inverter Switching Speed
8.3 LOGIC GATES
AND Gate OR Gate NAND Gate NOR Gate Universality of NAND/NOR Gates OR Realization by NAND/NOR Exclusive OR (EXOR) Gate Exclusive NOR Gate Strobe (or Inhibit) Glitches Remedy-Strobe Pulse
8.4 DIGITAL LOGIC FAMILIES
Bipolar Logic Family
8.5 CHARACTERISATION OF DIGITAL ICs 8.6 RESISTOR-TRANSISTOR LOGIC (RTL) 8.7 EMITTER-COUPLED LOGIC (ECL) 8.8 DIODE-TRANSISTOR LOGIC (DTL)
Wired Logic
8.9 TRANSISTOR-TRANSISTOR LOGIC (TTL)
Wired Logic
8.10 TRI-STATE LOGIC 8.11 CERTAIN OTHER LOGIC FAMILIES
Schottky TTL High Threshold Logic (HTL) Integrated Injection Logic (IIL)
8.12 MOS LOGIC
Digital MOSFET Circuits NOT Gate NMOS NAND Gate CMOS Inverter CMOS NAND Gate Universal Gate
8.13 SUMMARY 8.14 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
9. N umber Systems, Boolean Algebra and Combinational Circuits
9.1 INTRODUCTION 9.2 BINARY NUMBER SYSTEM
Number Conversion Binary Arithmetic
9.3 OCTAL NUMBER SYSTEM
Octal-to-Binary and Binary-to-Octal Conversion
9.4 HEXADECIMAL NUMBER SYSTEM
Hexadecimal-to-Binary and Binary-to-Hexadecimal Conversions Hexadecimal Arithmetic
9.5 CODES 9.6 THE ASCII CODE
Using the Code
9.7 BOOLEAN RELATIONS
Basic Gate Relations
9.8 SUM-OF-PRODUCTS/PRODUCT-OF-SUMS METHOD
Precise definitions
9.9 ALGEBRAIC SIMPLIFICATION 9.10 NAND AND NOR IMPLEMENTATION
NAND Implementation NOR Implementation
9.11 KARNAUGH MAP SIMPLIFICATION
Karnaugh MAP POS Simplification Simplification by Quine McCluskey (Q-M) Method Prime Implicants Prime Implements Essential Prime Implements
9.12 ADDERS AND SUBTRACTORS
Half Adder (HA) Full Adder Serial Adder
9.13 PRINCIPLE OF ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION
Controlled Inverter The Adder-Subtractor Addition Subtraction Addition-Subtraction Using Full Adder$mdash$$Complete System
9.14 DIGITAL COMPARATOR 9.15 PARITY CHECKERS/GENERATORS
Parity Checker/Generator Applications
9.16 MULTIPLEXERS AND DECODERS
Multiplexers Multiplexer Tree
9.17 DEMULTIPLEXERS/DECODERS
1 to 10 Decoder The 7445 3-to-8 Decoder Demultiplexer Tree
9.18 PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC ARRAYS (PLAs) 9.19 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
10. Se quential Circuits and Systems
10.1 INTRODUCTION 10.2 MEMORY CELLS AND FLIP-FLOPS
Basic Memory Cell SR Flip-flop Clocked SR Flip-Flop Triggering Preset and Clear
10.3 PULSE (EDGE) TRIGGERING
Clock Pulses Positive/Negative Edge Triggered SR Flip-Flop
10.4 EDGE TRIGGERED JK FLIP-FLOPS
Master-Slave Flip-Flop
10.5 DERIVED FLIP-FLOPS
D (Data) Flip-flop Summary of Excitation Tables of Flip-flops
10.6 REGISTERS
Memory Registers Shift Registers Commercially Available Registers
10.7 COUNTERS 10.8 ASYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS
Nonbinary Counters (Asynchronous) BCD Counters
10.9 SYNCHRONOUS COUNTERS
Presettable Synchronous Counter Nonbinary Counters MOD-6 Shift Counters/Ring Counters Twisted Ring Counter
10.10 STATE DIAGRAMS
State Models Examples D1, D2 Entries
10.11 MEMORIES 10.12 MEMORY CATEGORIES
RAM (Random Access Memory) ROM (Read Only Memory)
10.13 MAGNETIC MEMORY
Recording Reading Dual Read-Write Head Magnetic Tape Hard Disks Floppy Disks
10.14 OPTICAL MEMORY
CD ROM CD-R (Recordable) CD-RW DVD
10.15 READ ONLY MEMORY (ROM) (ELECTRONIC)
ROM Organization Two-dimensional Addressing of a ROM Memory Expansion Programming a ROM Erasable PROMS Flash Memory Application of ROM
10.16 RANDOM ACCESS MEMORY (RAM)
Basic RAM Organization Bipolar RAM cell Static NMOS RAM Dynamic RAM CMOS
10.17 EXAMPLE OF VARIOUS TYPES OF COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLES ROMS AND RAMS
ROM PROM 7489 64-bit RAM Other types of SRAMs
10.18 DIGITAL TO ANALOG (D/A) AND ANALOG TO DIGITAL (A/D) CONVERTORS
Digital to Analog Converter (DAC) Weighted Resistor DAC D/A Accuracy and Resolution Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) Successive Approximation A/D Convertor The ADC0804 Resolution and Accuracy
10.19 ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES PROBLEMS
11. M ultivibrators, Clocks and Power Supply Regulators
11.1 MULTIVIBRATORS
General Configuration of a Multivibrator Monostable Multivibrators Astable Multivibrators TTL Clocks
11.2 ANALOG MULTIVIBRATORS
Astable Multivibrator Schmitt Trigger Astable Multivibrator (Using Schmitt NAND Gate) Monostable Multivibrator
11.3 555 TIMER
Astable Operation Monostable Operation of 555 555 Timer Based Schmitt Trigger
11.4 POWER SUPPLIES AND REGULATORS
Linear Regulators (LRs) LR Application Example Switching Regulators
PROBLEMS
12. T he Digital Computer
12.1 INTRODUCTION 12.2 EXAMPLE OF MICROCOMPUTER$mdash$$BASED CONTROL SYSTEM 12.3 MINICOMPUTER 12.4 MAXICOMPUTER [21]
Central Processing Unit (CPU)
12.5 THE CONTROLLER 12.6 ARITHMATIC AND LOGIC UNIT (ALU) 12.7 INTRODUCTION TO HARDWARE DESCRIPTION LANGUAGE
Input and Output
PROBLEMS
13. Ca thode-Ray Tube
13.1 INTRODUCTION
Electron Deflection in Uniform Electric Field Energy Balance Cathode-Ray Tube Electron Emission CRT Components
13.2 OSCILLOSCOPES
CRO Applications
PROBLEMS
Bibliography Answers to Problems
Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11
Index
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion