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1.2
The sound pressure meters is amongst the simplest of meter designs and have been used since the very beginnings of the broadcast, recording and live audio industries. These come in the form of the Moving-coil Meter - the traditional 'needle' type of meter - or as a bar-graph of LEDs. [LEDs are the most common, with moving-coil meters now more often seen on 'retro' gear.]
Analog Sound pressure meter Magnetoelectric Sound pressure meter Digital display Sound pressure meter LED Sound pressure meter
1.4 Applications
Used in audio processing equipment industries like loud speaker. Used to show the o/p audio level of tape recorders and players etc. Can be used to adjust home cinema set-up loud speakers output to same level.
The circuit of sound pressure meter is constructed by using various components. In this section the components which are used are discussed. 2.1 IC CA3140 Operational Amplifier. 2.2 Electret Condenser Microphone. 2.3 Diodes 2.4 Power Supply 2.5 Resistors. 2.6 Capacitors. 2.7 Switches. 2.8 Bridge Rectifier 2.9 100uA Full Scale Deflection Meter
requiring input offset voltage nulling. The use of PMOS field effect transistors in the input stage results in common mode input voltage capability down to 0.5V below the negative supply terminal, an important attribute for single supply applications. The output stage uses bipolar transistors and includes built-in protection against damage from load terminal short circuiting to either supply rail or to ground. The CA3140 Series has the same 8-lead pinout used for the 741 and other industry standard op amps. The CA3140A and CA3140 are intended for operation at supply voltages up to 36V (-18v to +18v)
2.1.3 Pinouts
Circuit Description
As shown in the block diagram, the input terminals may be operated down to 0.5V below the negative supply rail. Two class A amplifier stages provide the voltage gain, and a unique class AB amplifier stage provides the current gain necessary to drive low-impedance loads. A biasing circuit provides control of cascoded constant current flow circuits in the first and second stages. The CA3140 includes an on chip phase compensating capacitor that is sufficient for the unity gain voltage follower configuration.
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Input Stage
The schematic diagram consists of a differential input stage using PMOS field-effect transistors (Q9, Q10) working into a mirror pair of bipolar transistors (Q11, Q12) functioning as load resistors together with resistors R2 through R5. The mirror pair transistors also function as a differential-to-single-ended converter to provide base current drive to the second stage bipolar transistor (Q13). Offset nulling, when desired, can be effected with a 10k potentiometer connected across Terminals 1 and 5 and with its slider arm connected to Terminal 4. Cascode-connected bipolar transistors Q2, Q5 are the constant current source for the input stage. The base biasing circuit for the constant current source is described subsequently. The small diodes D3, D4, D5 provide gate oxide protection against high voltage transients, e.g., static electricity.
Second Stage
Most of the voltage gain in the CA3140 is provided by the second amplifier stage, consisting of bipolar transistor Q13 and its cascode connected load resistance provided by bipolar transistors Q3, Q4. On-chip phase compensation, sufficient for a majority of the applications is provided by C1. Additional Miller-Effect compensation (roll off) can be accomplished, when desired, by simply connecting a small capacitor between Terminals 1 and 8. Terminal 8 is also used to strobe the output stage into quiescence. When terminal 8 is tied to the negative supply rail (Terminal 4) by mechanical or electrical means, the output Terminal 6 swings low, i.e., approximately to Terminal 4 potential.
Output Stage
The CA3140 Series circuits employ a broad band output stage that can sink loads to the negative supply to complement the capability of the PMOS input stage when operating near the negative rail. Quiescent current in the emitter-follower cascade circuit (Q17, Q18) is established by transistors (Q14, Q15) whose base currents are mirrored to current flowing through diode D2 in the bias circuit section. When the CA3140 is operating such that output Terminal 6 is sourcing current, transistor Q18 functions as an emitter-follower to source current from the V+ bus (Terminal 7), via D7, R9, and R11. Under these conditions, the collector potential of Q13 is sufficiently high to permit the necessary flow of base current to emitter follower Q17 which, in turn, drives Q18. When the CA3140 is operating such that output Terminal 6 is sinking current to the V- bus, transistor Q16 is the current sinking
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element. Transistor Q16 is mirror connected to D6, R7, with current fed by way of Q21, R12, and Q20. Transistor Q20, in turn, is biased by current flow through R13, zener D8, and R14. The dynamic current sink is controlled by voltage level sensing. For purposes of explanation, it is assumed that output Terminal 6 is quiescently established at the potential midpoint between the V+ and V- supply rails. When output current sinking mode operation is required, the collector potential of transistor Q13 is driven below its quiescent level, thereby causing Q17, Q18 to decrease the output voltage at Terminal 6. Thus, the gate terminal of PMOS transistor Q21 is displaced toward the V- bus, thereby reducing the channel resistance of Q21. As a consequence, there is an incremental increase in current flow through Q20, R12, Q21, D6, R7, and the base of Q16. As a result, Q16 sinks current from Terminal 6 in direct response to the incremental change in output voltage caused by Q18. This sink current flows regardless of load; any excess current is internally supplied by the emitterfollower Q18. Short circuit protection of the output circuit is provided by Q19, which is driven into conduction by the high voltage drop developed across R11 under output short circuit conditions. Under these conditions, the collector of Q19 diverts current from Q4 so as to reduce the base current drive from Q17, thereby limiting current flow in Q18 to the short circuited load terminal.
Bias Circuit
Quiescent current in all stages (except the dynamic current sink) of the CA3140 is dependent upon bias current flow in R1. The function of the bias circuit is to establish and maintain constant current flow through D1, Q6, Q8 and D2. D1 is a diode connected transistor mirror connected in parallel with the base emitter junctions of Q1, Q2, and Q3. D1 may be considered as a current sampling diode that senses the emitter current of Q6 and automatically adjusts the base current of Q6 (via Q1) to maintain a constant current through Q6, Q8, D2. The base currents in Q2, Q3 are also determined by constant current flow D1. Furthermore, current in diode connected transistor Q2 establishes the currents in transistors Q14 and Q15.
Typical Applications
Wide dynamic range of input and output characteristics with the most desirable high input impedance characteristics is achieved in the CA3140 by the use of an unique design based upon the PMOS Bipolar process. Input common mode voltage range and output swing capabilities are complementary, allowing operation with the single supply down to 4V. The wide dynamic range of these parameters also means that this device is suitable for many
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single supply applications, such as, for example, where one input is driven below the potential of Terminal 4 and the phase sense of the output signal must be maintained a most important consideration in comparator applications.
2.1.5 Features
MOSFET Input Stage - Very High Input Impedance (ZIN) -1.5T (Typ) - Very Low Input Current (Il) -10pA (Typ) at }15V - Wide Common Mode Input Voltage Range (VlCR) - Can be Swung 0.5V Below Negative Supply Voltage Rail - Output Swing Complements Input Common Mode Range Directly Replaces Industry Type 741 in Most Applications
2.1.6 Applications
Ground-Referenced Single Supply Amplifiers in Automobile and Portable Instrumentation Sample and Hold Amplifiers Long Duration Timers/Multivibrators (seconds-Minutes-Hours) Photocurrent Instrumentation Peak Detectors Active Filters Comparators Interface in 5V TTL Systems and Other Low Supply Voltage Systems All Standard Operational Amplifier Applications Function Generators Tone Controls Power Supplies Portable Instruments Intrusion Alarm Systems
Fig. Electret condenser microphone capsules and its equivalent circuit. A typical electret microphone preamp circuit uses an FET in a common source configuration. The two-terminal electret capsule contains an FET which must be externally powered by supply voltage V+. The resistor sets the gain and output impedance. The audio signal appears at the output, after a DC-blocking capacitor. An electret is a stable dielectric material with a permanently-embedded static electric charge (which, due to the high resistance and chemical stability of the material, will not decay for hundreds of years). The name comes from electrostatic and magnet; drawing analogy to the formation of a magnet by alignment of magnetic domains in a piece of iron. Electrets are commonly made by first melting a suitable dielectric material such as a plastic or wax that contains polar molecules, and then allowing it to re-solidify in a powerful electrostatic field. The polar molecules of the dielectric align themselves to the direction of the electrostatic
field, producing a permanent electrostatic "bias". Modern electret microphones use PTFE plastic, either in film or solute form, to form the electret. Electret materials have been known since the 1920s, and were proposed as condenser microphone elements several times, but were considered impractical until the foil electret type was invented at Bell Laboratories in 1962 by Gerhard Sessler and Jim West, using a thin metallized Teflon foil. This became the most common type, used in many applications from high-quality recording and lavaliere use to built-in microphones in small sound recording devices and telephones. Though electret mics were once considered low cost and low quality, the best ones can now rival capacitor mics in every respect apart from low noise and can even have the long-term stability and ultra-flat response needed for a measuring microphone. Few electret microphones rival the best DC-polarized units in terms of noise level, but this is not due to any inherent limitation of the electret. Rather, mass production techniques needed to produce electrets cheaply do not lend themselves to the precision needed to produce the highest quality microphones.
2.2.1 Types
There are three major types of electret microphone, differing in the way the electret material is used: Foil-type or diaphragm-type A film of electret material is used as the diaphragm itself. This is the most common type, but also the lowest quality, since the electret material does not make a particularly good diaphragm. Back electret An electret film is applied to the back plate of the microphone capsule and the diaphragm is made of an uncharged material which may be mechanically more suitable for the transducer design being realized. Front electret
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In this newer type, the back plate is eliminated from the design, and the condenser is formed by the diaphragm and the inside surface of the capsule. The electret film is adhered to the inside front cover and the metalized diaphragm is connected to the input of the FET. It is equivalent to the back electret in that any conductive film may be used for the diaphragm. Unlike other condenser microphones electret types require no polarizing voltage, but they normally contain an integrated preamplifier which does require a small amount of power (often incorrectly called polarizing power or bias). This preamp is frequently phantom powered in sound reinforcement and studio applications. Other types simply include a 1.5V battery in the microphone housing, which is often left permanently connected as the current drain is usually very small.
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Fig. 2.3 Diode and its symbol The most common function of a diode is to allow an electric current to pass in one direction (called the diode's forward direction), while blocking current in the opposite direction (the reverse direction). Thus, the diode can be thought of as an electronic version of a check valve. This unidirectional behavior is called rectification, and is used to convert alternating current to direct current, and to extract modulation from radio signals in radio receivers these diodes are forms of rectifiers. However, diodes can have more complicated behavior than this simple onoff action. Semiconductor diodes do not begin conducting electricity until a certain threshold voltage is present in the forward direction (a state in which the diode is said to be forward-biased). The voltage drop across a forward-biased diode varies only a little with the current, and is a function of temperature; this effect can be used as a temperature sensor or voltage reference. Semiconductor diodes' nonlinear currentvoltage characteristic can be tailored by varying the semiconductor materials and introducing impurities into (doping) the materials. These are exploited in special purpose diodes that perform many different functions. For example, diodes are used to regulate voltage (Zener diodes), to protect circuits from high voltage surges (avalanche diodes), to electronically tune radio and TV receivers (varactor diodes), to generate radio frequency oscillations (tunnel diodes, Gunn diodes, IMPATT diodes), and to produce light (light emitting diodes). Tunnel diodes exhibit negative resistance, which makes them useful in some types of circuits.
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Diodes were the first semiconductor electronic devices. The discovery of crystals' rectifying abilities was made by German physicist Ferdinand Braun in 1874. The first semiconductor diodes, called cat's whisker diodes, developed around 1906, were made of mineral crystals such as galena. Today most diodes are made of silicon, but other semiconductors such as germanium are sometimes used.
PIN diode: This type of diode is typified by its construction. It has the standard P type and N-type areas, but between them there is an area of Intrinsic semiconductor which has no doping. The area of the intrinsic semiconductor has the effect of increasing the area of the depletion region which can be useful for switching applications as well as for use in photodiodes, etc. See related articles list in left hand margin. PN Junction: The standard PN junction may be thought of as the normal or standard type of diode in use today. These diodes can come as small signal types for use in radio frequency, or other low current applications which may be termed as signal diodes. Other types may be intended for high current and high voltage applications and are normally termed rectifier diodes. See related articles list in left hand margin. Rectifier diode: This definition refers to diodes that are used in power supplies for rectifying alternating power inputs. The diodes are generally PN junction diodes, although Schottky diodes may be used if low voltage drops are needed. They are able to rectify current levels that may range from an amp upwards. Schottky diodes: This type of diode has a lower forward voltage drop than ordinary silicon PN junction diodes. At low currents the drop may be somewhere between 0.15 and 0.4 volts as opposed to 0.6 volts for a silicon diode. To achieve this performance they are constructed in a different way to normal diodes having a metal to semiconductor contact. They are widely used as clamping diodes, in RF applications, and also for rectifier applications.
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Fig.2.3.2 Different types of diodes Zener diode: The Zener diode is a very useful type of diode as it provides a stable reference voltage. As a result it is used in vast quantities. It is run under reverse bias conditions and it is found that when a certain voltage is reached it breaks down. If the current is limited through a resistor, it enables a stable voltage to be produced. This type of diode is therefore widely used to provide a reference voltage in power supplies.
The 1N4148 diode is a fast, standard small signal silicon diode with high conductance used in signal processing. Its name follows the JEDEC nomenclature. The diode 1N4148 is generally available in a DO-35 glass package and is very useful at high frequencies with a reverse recovery time of no more than 4ns. This permits rectification and detection of radio frequency signals very effectively, as long as their amplitude is above the forward conduction threshold of silicon (around 0.7V) or the diode is biased. Specification:
VRRM = 100V (Maximum Repetitive Reverse Voltage) IO = 200mA (Average Rectified Forward Current) IF = 300mA (DC Forward Current) IFSM = 1.0 A (Pulse Width = 1 sec), 4.0 A (Pulse Width = 1 uSec) (Non-Repetitive Peak Forward Surge Current) PD = 500 mW (power Dissipation) TRR < 4ns (reverse recovery time)
The 1N4148 is a standard silicon switching diode. Its name follows the JEDEC nomenclature. The 1N4148 has a DO-35 glass package and is very useful at high frequencies with a reverse recovery time of no more than 4ns. It was second sourced by many
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manufacturers; Texas Instruments listed their version of the device in an October 1966 data sheet. The diode 1N4148 is a fast, standard small signal silicon diode with high conductance used in signal processing. Its name follows the JEDEC nomenclature.
2.4.2 Symbol of Batteries The symbol for a battery in a circuit diagram is as shown in the figure below. It originated as a schematic drawing of the earliest type of battery, a voltaic pile.
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Fig 2.4.2 Symbol of power supply Strictly, a battery is a collection of multiple electrochemical cells, but in popular usage battery often refers to a single cell. The first electrochemical cell was developed by the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta in 1792, and in 1800 he invented the first batteryfor him, a "pile" of cells.
2.5 Resistors
A resistor is a two-terminal electronic component which implements electrical resistance as a circuit element. When a voltage V is applied across the terminals of resistor, a current I will flow through the resistor in direct proportion to that voltage. The reciprocal of the constant of proportionality is known as the resistance R, since, with a given voltage V, a larger value of R further "resists" the flow of current I as given by Ohm's law:
Fig.2.5.Types of Resistors
2.6 Capacitors
A capacitor is a passive electronic component consisting of a pair of conductors separated by a dielectric (insulator). When there is a potential difference (voltage) across the
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conductors, a static electric field develops in the dielectric that stores energy and produces a mechanical force between the conductors. An ideal capacitor is characterized by a single constant value, capacitance, measured in farads. This is the ratio of the electric charge on each conductor to the potential difference between them.
2.6.2 Introduction
Low noise Polyester capacitors are very important for electronic equipment. They are needed in AC applications when noise may be created in a capacitor which impacts the environment. With certain frequencies Polyester capacitors may create a noise level of up to 80dB(A) - this humming or whistling can be observed e.g. in ballasts in the lighting industry, in monitors and TV sets or in audio equipment. With a new construction principle
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noise creation has been considerably reduced, at the same time several electrical properties have been substantially improved.
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2.6.4 Features
1.
2.
2.7 Switch
In electronics, a switch is an electrical component that can break an electrical circuit, interrupting the current or diverting it from one conductor to another. Each set of contacts can be in one of two states: either 'closed' meaning the contacts are touching and electricity can flow between them, or 'open', meaning the contacts are separated and nonconducting.
Fig 2.7.1 various forms of switches Electrical switches. Top, left to right: circuit breaker, mercury, wafer switch, DIP switch, surface mount switch, reed switch. Bottom, left to right: wall switch (U.S. style), miniature toggle switch, in-line switch, push-button switch, rocker switch, micro switch.
2.8 Rectifier
A rectifier is an electrical device that converts alternating current (AC), which periodically reverses direction, to direct current (DC), which flows in only one direction. The process is known as rectification. Physically, rectifiers take a number of forms, including vacuum tube diodes, mercury-arc valves, solid-state diodes, silicon-controlled rectifiers and other silicon-based semiconductor switches. Historically, even synchronous electromechanical switches and motors have been used. Early radio receivers, called crystal radios, used a "cat's whisker" of fine wire pressing on a crystal of galena (lead sulfide) to serve as a point-contact rectifier or "crystal detector". Rectifiers have many uses, but are often found serving as components of DC power supplies and high-voltage direct current power transmission systems. Rectification may serve
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in roles other than to generate direct current for use as a source of power. As noted, detectors of radio signals serve as rectifiers. In gas heating systems flame rectification is used to detect presence of flame. The simple process of rectification produces a type of DC characterized by pulsating voltages and currents (although still unidirectional). Depending upon the type of end-use, this type of DC current may then be further modified into the type of relatively constant voltage DC characteristically produced by such sources as batteries and solar cells.
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terminal to the right along the red (positive) path to the output, and returns to the lower supply terminal via the blue (negative) path.
When the input connected to the left corner is negative, and the input connected to the right corner is positive, current flows from the upper supply terminal to the right along the red (positive) path to the output, and returns to the lower supply terminal via the blue (negative) path.
In each case, the upper right output remains positive and lower right output negative. Since this is true whether the input is AC or DC, this circuit not only produces a DC output from an AC input, it can also provide what is sometimes called "reverse polarity protection". That is, it permits normal functioning of DC-powered equipment when batteries have been installed backwards, or when the leads (wires) from a DC power source have been reversed, and protects the equipment from potential damage caused by reverse polarity. AC, half-wave and full wave rectified signals.
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Prior to the availability of integrated circuits, a bridge rectifier was constructed from "discrete components", i.e., separate diodes. Since about 1950, a single four-terminal component containing the four diodes connected in a bridge configuration became a standard commercial component and is now available with various voltage and current ratings
An ammeter is a measuring instrument used to measure the electric current in a circuit. Electric currents are measured in amperes (A), hence the name. Instruments used to measure smaller currents, in the mill ampere or microampere range, are designated as milliammeters or microammeters. Early ammeters were laboratory instruments which relied on the Earth's magnetic field for operation. By the late 19th century, improved instruments
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were designed which could be mounted in any position and allowed accurate measurements in electric power systems.
Moving iron ammeters use a piece of iron which moves when acted upon by the electromagnetic force of a fixed coil of wire. This type of meter responds to both direct and alternating currents (as opposed to the moving coil ammeter, which works on direct current only). The iron element consists of a moving vane attached to a pointer, and a fixed vane, surrounded by a coil. As alternating or direct current flows through the coil and induces a magnetic field in both vanes, the vanes repel each other and the moving vane deflects against the restoring force provided by fine helical springs. The non-linear scale of these meters makes them unpopular.
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An electrodynamic movement uses an electromagnet instead of the permanent magnet of the d'Arsonval movement. This instrument can respond to both alternating and direct current.
In a hot-wire ammeter, a current passes through a wire which expands as it heats. Although these instruments have slow response time and low accuracy, they were sometimes used in measuring radio-frequency current.
Digital ammeter designs use an analog to digital converter (ADC) to measure the voltage across the shunt resistor; the digital display is calibrated to read the current through the shunt.
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There is also a whole range of devices referred to as integrating ammeters. In these ammeters, the amount of current is summed over time, giving as a result the product of current and time, which is proportional to the energy transferred with that current. These can be used for energy meters (watt-hour meters) or for estimating the charge of battery or capacitor.
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Fig 2.10 Picture of printed circuit board Conducting layers are typically made of thin copper foil. Insulating layers dielectric is typically laminated together with epoxy resin prepreg. The board is typically coated with a solder mask that is green in colour. Other colours that are normally available are blue and red. There are quite a few different dielectrics that can be chosen to provide different insulating values depending on the requirements of the circuit. Some of these dielectrics are polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon), FR-4, FR-1, CEM-1 or CEM-3. Well known prepreg materials used in the PCB industry are FR-2 (Phenolic cotton paper), FR-3 (Cotton paper and epoxy), FR-4 (Woven glass and epoxy), FR-5 (Woven glass and epoxy), FR-6 (Matte glass and polyester), G-10 (Woven glass and epoxy), CEM-1 (Cotton paper and epoxy), CEM-2 (Cotton paper and epoxy), CEM-3 (Woven glass and epoxy), CEM-4 (Woven glass and epoxy), CEM-5 (Woven glass and polyester). Thermal expansion is an important consideration especially with BGA and naked die technologies, and glass fiber offers the best dimensional stability.
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As it can be shown in the block diagram, the gadget can be divided as below 3.1.1 Audio amplifier section We have an audio amplifier section which will amplify the speech signal output from the condenser microphone (it will be in the order of mA). Here we have used CA3140 operational amplifier as an amplifier section with gain defined by the feedback resistor.
3.3
Circuit description
The circuit is quite simple. It is more or less the same as that given in the
datasheets of the chip. This circuit is to setup home-cinema set adjusting all the loudspeaker outputs to the same level when heard from the listening position. In practice this device is a simple (though linear and precise) 100Aac millivolt meter.
Fig. 3.3 Sound Pressure Meter The precision of the measure is entirely depending on the frequency response of the microphone used but, fortunately, for the main purpose of this circuit an absolutely flat response is not required. Therefore, a cheap miniature electret microphone can be used. The circuit is based on non- inverting amplifier based on op-amp CA3140 (IC1).The sound picked by the condenser mic will be amplified by the IC1 and rectified by the bridge D1 to drive the meter M1.The deflection on the meter will be proportional to the pressure of the sound falling on the mic. The switch S1 can be used as an ON/OFF switch.
S.no 1.
2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Tape Recorder F.M. Samsung Mobile Nokia Mobile L.G. Mobile Apple Ipod Sony Ipod Clap Sound Air
More than 3 decibels More than 3 decibels 3decibels 2.5decibels 2 decibels 1.5 decibels 1 decibels 1 decibels 0 decibels
More than 1mA More than 1mA 1mA 0.09mA 0.08mA 0.07mA 0.06mA 0.06mA 0.04mA
More than 100uA More than 100uA 100uA 90uA 80uA 70uA 60uA 60uA 40uA
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References
1) Electronic circuit analysis-K. Lalkishore, BS Publications, 2004. 2) Electronic devices and circuits-J. Mill man and C.C. Hawkins, Tata McGraw Hill, 1988.
12) www.allaboutcircuits.com
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