J
Jim Thompson
Guest
On Sat, 10 Nov 2012 17:12:50 -0800, Jon Kirwan
<jonk@infinitefactors.org> wrote:
time fully characterizing their devices for "Spice".
In the monolithic world it's entirely different. Foundries provide me
full characterization including substrate effects.
And Slowman bloviates. He can't tell an emitter from a collector
without a drawing >:-}
...Jim Thompson
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| James E.Thompson, CTO | mens |
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<jonk@infinitefactors.org> wrote:
For manufacturers of discrete devices, there's no money in spendingOn Sat, 10 Nov 2012 15:50:02 -0800 (PST), Bill Sloman
bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote:
On Nov 11, 9:06 am, "Tim Williams" <tmoran...@charter.net> wrote:
BJT SPICE models are not specifically small or large signal models, they
are general representations for transient or AC mode simulations.
What waveforms are you getting?
Qucs uses a SPICE backend? Have you tried manipulating the simulation
parameters to see if it's producing an accurate, stable result?
Can you generate a SPICE netlist and post it here?
Deep Friar: a very philosophical monk.
Website:http://seventransistorlabs.com
"o pere o" <m...@somewhere.net> wrote in messagenews:k7mic6$amu$1@dont-email.me...
To make a long story short, I ended up simulating an emitter follower
with Qucs. This simulator has some transistor models embedded, but you
are able to insert PSpice models and subcircuits if you need more.
When you increase input signal level up to the point where the output
should clip at zero, one transistor model clips correctly (BFP405, from
Qucs) but others not (BFR93a, 2N2222A). The BFR93a model is a PSpice
model from the NXP site and I have tried several 2N2222a models (one
from Qucs itself, one PSpice model from Zetex and another PSpice model
from somewhere): none of these clips at zero although it does at
VCC=3.3.
Tried the same circuit in LTSpice with the same result. Am I the only
one experiencing this? Has anyone got better large-signal models
-especially for the BFR93a?
The transistor models you can get from NXP are Gummel-Poon models, as
are the models that come with LTSpice.
LTspice also supports the superior VBIC - Vertical Bipolar Inter
Company - model but manufactures treat the parameters for VBIC models
as "commercial in confidence" and don't publish them.
Gummel-Poon doesn't model inverted transistors very accurately, and
some time ago I wanted to get hold of a VBIC model to see it it would
do better, as it has been claimed that it would, but nobody around
here had any non-proprietary data that they were prepared to share
with me.
Support for GP and VBIC is one thing. You point out how hard
it is to get the VBIC model parameters. But even the GP
parameters are rarely even close to fully provided.
For example, the models I've seen for BJTs are pretty weak in
low current beta. They usually don't include figures for Ise
(which defaults to 0) or Ne (defaulted to 1.5, which matters
not at all if Ise=0.) [Or in the older literature where these
parameters are called C_2=Ise/Is and n_EL.] The models I've
seen just assume that a log plot of Ic and Ib versus Vbe is a
nice line all the way back towards Vbe=0V, instead of the
dramatic knee that actually takes place because actual BJTs
have extra effects from recombinations of surface carriers
and carriers in the emitter-base space-charge layer, and also
due to the formation of emitter-base surface channels. Almost
never do I find these low current parameters modeled, nor is
there usually enough information in the data sheet to develop
them (they start their charts typically with base currents
near a microamp, with any serious beta drop-off not shown.)
Modelling a discrete equivalent to a PUJT, for example, isn't
possible without them because the beta drop at low currents
is what makes the difference between a simulation that models
real behavior of the discrete pair and one that completely
fails and instead finds a stable quiescent point.
In principle it isn't too difficult to make up a set of VBIC
parameters from Gummel-Poon data and a few extra measurements, but
nobody seems to have bothered to do it.
I'd just like to see GP parameters, even. Rarely do I see
much more than EM2 model parameters, with a few strays from
GP added to the mix.
It would be interesting to sweep low base currents from say
5nA to 500nA in order to actually get Ise and Ne to use in
simulation. But it's not been a priority of any kind, yet. I
just remain aware of the problem. The BJT models that are
readily available rarely make use of anything close to all
the GP model parameters. And Ise and Ne are merely EM3 model
parameters (pre-GP.)
So while it may be not too difficult to add what's needed to
get VBIC, assuming you have all the GP parameters, the
problem is that you rarely have all the GP parameters. So the
difficulty now rises rapidly because of all the holes in the
missing modelling parameters for GP or even EM3 in the models
that us unwashed mortals can get.
Jon
time fully characterizing their devices for "Spice".
In the monolithic world it's entirely different. Foundries provide me
full characterization including substrate effects.
And Slowman bloviates. He can't tell an emitter from a collector
without a drawing >:-}
...Jim Thompson
--
| James E.Thompson, CTO | mens |
| Analog Innovations, Inc. | et |
| Analog/Mixed-Signal ASIC's and Discrete Systems | manus |
| Phoenix, Arizona 85048 Skype: Contacts Only | |
| Voice
| E-mail Icon at http://www.analog-innovations.com | 1962 |
I love to cook with wine. Sometimes I even put it in the food.