Hello Claude,
this assertion from you I could read already several times in this forum. I cannot remember one single book or any other serious text , which can support this (in my eyes: somewhat "surprising") opinion.
Up to now - you are the only person I know who is stating that Ic=alpha*Ie describes the control properties of a BJT. Of course, I can be in error and my opinion is of less importance.
Therefore, I promise you - I will change my mind if you answer the following question (and it is not the first time, I did ask you already at least twice, but without any response):
How do you explain the stabilizing effect without using the voltage Vbe, which an emitter resistor Re has on unwanted and unexpected changes resp. variations of the dc quiescent collector current Ic?
With regards
W.
The stabilizing effect is due to the fact that the signal source driving the base is constant voltage. Being a current controlled device, thermally unstable w/ voltage control, a bjt stage driven from a CVS must have a resistor either in the base or emitter lead. This resistor Re determines the bias current, or quiescent point of the bjt stage. Let's say that Vin (power supply bias source) is 5.0 volts, with Re = 1.0 kohm, rbb' = 20 ohm, w/ beta = 100. Vbe does not directly control Ic, but its 0.7V drop factors in so that Ie = (5.0 -0.7)/((20/101)+1.0k = 4.3 mA. I've already stated that most physical power/signal sources are intentionally built for CVS operation, not CCS. Inserting the proper value of R or a constant current source/sink alleviates this when a bjt is employed.
Temperature increases, effectively raising bets, raising Ies, raising Vt, lowering Vbe. The resistor Re is a series type of feedback. A temp rise would lower Vbe to 0.65V, so that Ie is now tending towards 4.35 mA, up from 4.30 mA. But, the increase in Ie immediately results in a larger voltage drop across Re. Since Vin is fixed, a larger Vre means that the drop across rbb' and Vbe must decrease. But did Ie decrease because of the Vbe decrease? I say it cannot, since Vbe takes time to respond.
When temp changes, more carriers are made available through electron-hole pair generation, ehpg. More holes are injected base to emitter and more electrons injected emitter to base. When holes enter the emitter, since there are now more of them, collisions with bulk emitter resistance as well as recombination in edge of emitter depletion zone result in a build up of charges above that previously encountered. As a result new holes entering the emitter incur a larger barrier due to increased charge accumulation. Now turn to Re, the increased carrier motion results in more collisions with Re lattice ions. The charge accumulation at the Re terminal connecting the emitter has increased.
This results in an increased E field and barrier to new incoming holes. So this barrier repels emitter holes as they transit towards Re resulting in a buildup of additional holes in emitter. Likewise injection of holes from base towards emitter must decrease due to charge buildup in emitter and Re. Again, the build up is a result of increased Ie, eventually Vbe decreases. Vbe is a result of interaction between the external power source E field forward biasing the b-e junction, minus the barrier E field due to accumulation of additional charges.
Before Vbe decreases, Ie first increased. Again, the external source, or ambient temp, or other condition, brought about the change in Ie, then Vbe followed as expected since Eli the Ice man predicts in a capacitance that I leads V.
Vbe decreasing did not force Ie to decrease. Rather inevitable build up of charges due to increased conduction due to increased carrier concentration brought on by increased thermal generation of electron-hole pairs, is what forced Vbe to decrease.
Vbe is involved, but not in the manner you think. If I'm wrong correct me because only you know what you think, I do not wish to put wors in your mouth. You seem to suggest, my apologies if otherwise, that any change in Ie due to temp or other action, is corrected by Vbe, i.e. that Vbe responds to the change and forces Ie by controlling it. I have shown that Vbe is incidental, it responds to the change, but is not the agent forcing the change.
Why does temp change conduction? Because more ehpg takes place at higher temp. So what does this mean? Increased conduction current in emitter and base immediately increases the charge accumulation in the emitter region as well as Re. This results in an increased voltage drop on Re as well as emitter region bulk resistance. But the base lead is connected to a CVS. So Vbe is the difference between Vb and Ve. Ve is moved up towards the base due to increased Ie as well as increased barrier formed by additional charge carriers, brought into existence via ehpg.
Vbe is not what forced Ie to reverse and correct itself. Again, Vbe adjusts after other parameters have settled. This notion that changes in Ib and Ie are merely responses to changes in Vbe cannot withstand even a mild scrutiny.
You asked me to explain how the Re provides correction to changes w/o using Vbe. But Ohm's law and Shockley state that such is impossible. In explaining how Re corrects drift due to temp, I must discuss Ib, Vbe, and Ie, all 3 of them. They all interact. But to answer your question, Vbe is NOT the agent forcing Ie to correct itself. Charge buildup does that.
If Re is too small in value, the charge build up is too small to counter-act the increased carrier conduction from ehpg. Re must be a sufficiently large value to be effective. Large Re insures more lattice collisions in Re bulk material, forcing a big buildup of charge, which forces Ve to rise towards Vb, forcing Vbe to decrease. Vbe decreasing is a result of Ie and Re as well as ehpg. Vbe change takes place after Ie and Re and the barrier have changed.
Or look at it this way, Vbe = Vb-Ve. Since Vb is fixed by the source, raising Ve lowers Vbe. But raising Ve is done by ehpg, Re collisions, Ie change, resulting in Ie lowering due to higher barrier in Re and emitter.
Ie/Vbe/Ib are so tied together, it is impossible to say that this one is the driver, or active agent, while these 2 are controlled by the other. They interact. I don't know how else to put it.
This is negative feedback, SERIES applied. It could be implemented in a parallel method as well. If the output of an amp stage is fed back parallel with the input source at the base terminal, the output change injects a changed current component into the base. Of course Vbe will catch up, it must. But Ie/Ic changed per the new current, Vbe lags behind catching up.
The best answer to your question is a phototransistor example. An emitter resistor Re connects to the bjt whose stimulus is incident light. A light beam excited the PT, Ie is established,and Vbe will be determined by device characteristics. If the light increases, the emitter current Ie increases and there is no feedback to correct it. The base and emitter float up to a new value. Here there is no CVS attached to the base forcing Vb to a fixed value. Vbe will adjust to a new value, but both Vb and Ve will rise. Vbe actually INcreases here instead of decrease.
Did this help? I will clarify, feel free to ask for specific details.