Mike Monett wrote...
Roy Lewallen wrote:
The second is that the ratio of reverse to forward current increases as
the signal gets smaller and smaller, reaching one at the limit. This can
be observed by looking at the I-V curve of a diode. At the origin, the
curve is a straight line - the diode behaves just like a resistor. ...
Excellent description - thanks.
Only one small problem - as Win pointed out, Bob Pease feels a
diode-connected 2N3904 has lower leakage at low voltage than a 1N4148:
"What's All This Comparator Stuff, Anyhow?"
http://www.elecdesign.com/Articles/A...9517/9517.html
Does this mean a 2N3904 has a shallower slope than a 1N4148 through zero,
or perhaps one or the other has an offset, such as the Agilent Zero Bias
Schottky Detector Diodes shown in AN969?
No, it means its a better diode at low currents. See my curves again,
http://www.picovolt.com/win/elec/com...de-curves.html Note the
1n458 and the JFET diodes, which follow the theoretical 60mV/decade rule
down to very low currents. As for Roy Lewallen's "ratio of reverse to
forward current" argument, there is no reverse current for these fine
fellows, at least for DC and reasonably low frequencies. It's the very
crummy gold-doped 1n4148 that falls over. Awwkk!
--
Thanks,
- Win