Forward Active Mode of an NPN Transistor: Identify the correct bias conditions for an n–p–n transistor operating in the forward active region.

Electronics and Communication Engineering Electronic Devices and Circuits Difficulty: Easy
Choose an option
  • A
    emitter is positive with respect to base
  • B
    collector is positive with respect to base
  • C
    base is positive with respect to emitter and collector is positive with respect to base
  • D
    none of the above
  • E
    base negative with respect to collector

Answer

Correct Answer: base is positive with respect to emitter and collector is positive with respect to base

Explanation

Introduction / Context:BJT operation depends on proper biasing of junctions. Forward active mode is the most important for amplification purposes.

Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Device: NPN transistor.
  • Bias conditions needed: forward-bias base–emitter, reverse-bias base–collector.

Concept / Approach:

For forward active mode: base–emitter junction must be forward biased (VB > VE), and base–collector must be reverse biased (VC > VB).

Step-by-Step Solution:

Step 1: Forward bias condition: VB > VE.Step 2: Reverse bias condition: VC > VB.Step 3: Together, VB > VE and VC > VB → amplification region.

Verification / Alternative check:

This is the standard textbook definition of forward active biasing for NPN transistors.

Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Emitter positive w.r.t. base: would mean base–emitter reverse bias.
  • Collector positive only w.r.t. base: incomplete without base–emitter condition.
  • None of the above: incorrect, option C is correct.

Common Pitfalls:

  • Mixing up biasing for PNP vs. NPN.
  • Thinking only one junction condition is sufficient.

Final Answer:

base is positive with respect to emitter and collector is positive with respect to base

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