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"Paul Burridge" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
... Hi guys, I saw in Malvino's Electronic Principles that it is stated that Idss and gfs (the transconductance/gain) are easy to measure, whereas Vgs(off) is not and that manufacturers calculate it from this formula (hope I've remembered it right) Vgs(off) = -2*Idss/gfs I've just checked out this assertion by measuring Vgs - v - Id for a bunch of assorted FETs and found that I could easily establish the pinch off voltage to within about 0.1V either way. Contrary to what the book says, I personally have found it a simple matter to measure Vgs(off). So why do they make out it's a big deal? Hello Paul, Vgs_off seems to be often specified at Id=1nA. The measurement at such low current levels takes a lot of time and it requires a very clean test fixture. How have you measured at exactly Id = 1nA +/-0.1nA ? Best Regards, Helmut A typical datasheet: http://www.fairchildsemi.com/ds/J3/J310.pdf |
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