Chapter 24: Semiconductor Devices and Electronic Circuits (Set-3)

When forward current in a diode increases, its dynamic resistance generally

A Increases sharply
B Becomes infinite
C Stays constant
D Decreases

In a forward-biased silicon diode, most applied voltage mainly drops across

A Depletion region
B Metal contacts
C Neutral regions
D Lead wires

Temperature rise in a diode typically causes knee voltage to

A Increase
B Decrease
C Stay same
D Become zero

For a reverse-biased diode below breakdown, current is nearly

A Proportional to V
B Zero always
C Very oscillatory
D Constant

Zener regulator maintains output voltage mainly by changing

A Zener current
B Load resistance
C Transformer ratio
D Input frequency

If load current increases in a Zener regulator, Zener current usually

A Increases
B Decreases
C Becomes negative
D Doubles always

A Zener diode stops regulating properly when its current falls below

A Peak current
B Reverse current
C Avalanche current
D Knee current

Main purpose of selecting correct series resistor in Zener circuit is to

A Increase ripple
B Raise threshold
C Limit Zener power
D Remove DC

Tunnel diode negative resistance region lies between

A Knee and breakdown
B Peak and valley
C Saturation and cutoff
D Open and short

Heavy doping in tunnel diode mainly produces

A Thick depletion
B High barrier
C No junction
D Thin depletion

Tunnel diode is biased in negative resistance region mainly for

A Oscillation generation
B Stable DC supply
C Rectifier filtering
D Heat control

LED efficiency is higher when semiconductor has

A Indirect band gap
B Zero band gap
C Direct band gap
D Metallic band

LED wavelength mainly depends on

A Junction area
B Band gap value
C Wire resistance
D Supply ripple

LCD segment becomes visible mainly due to change in

A Charge storage
B Diode conduction
C Thermal emission
D Polarization rotation

Backlighting in LCD is required mainly because LCD is

A Light modulator
B Light emitter
C Current source
D Voltage source

Solar cell I–V curve in sunlight shows current at zero voltage equals

A Open voltage
B Short current
C Fill factor
D Peak power

Series resistance in a solar cell mainly reduces

A Voc only
B Band gap
C Fill factor
D Light absorption

Shunt resistance in a solar cell represents

A Ideal insulation
B Leakage paths
C Metal contacts
D Doping level

A diode used for demodulation is commonly called

A Flyback diode
B Zener diode
C Tunnel diode
D Detector diode

A peak detector circuit mainly uses diode and

A Inductor
B Transformer
C Capacitor
D Thermistor

In half-wave rectifier, average DC output is approximately

A 2Vm/π
B Vm/π
C Vm/2
D Vm

In full-wave rectifier, average DC output is approximately

A Vm/π
B Vm/2
C Vm
D 2Vm/π

Bridge rectifier advantage over center-tap is

A Needs center tap
B Lower diode count
C Better transformer use
D No filtering needed

Capacitor filter works best when load current is

A Very low
B Very high
C Zero always
D Alternating only

Peak inverse voltage in center-tap full-wave is about

A Vm
B Vm/2
C 4Vm
D 2Vm

In CE amplifier, bypass capacitor is mainly used to

A Increase DC bias
B Increase AC gain
C Reduce input noise
D Raise cutoff

Coupling capacitor in amplifier mainly blocks

A AC signal
B Heat flow
C DC component
D Magnetic field

In CE amplifier, midband gain decreases mainly due to

A Loading effect
B Low temperature
C Reverse bias
D Junction breakdown

Lower cutoff frequency in RC-coupled amplifier is mainly set by

A Collector resistor
B Heat sink
C Supply voltage
D Coupling capacitors

Upper cutoff frequency mainly depends on

A Transformer core
B Junction capacitances
C DC bias only
D Wire color

Miller effect mainly increases

A Output voltage
B DC current
C Power supply
D Input capacitance

Input impedance of emitter follower is generally

A Very low
B Zero
C Very high
D Negative

Output impedance of emitter follower is generally

A Very low
B Very high
C Infinite
D Unstable

In JFET, drain current saturation starts near

A Gate forward bias
B Pinch-off condition
C Zener breakdown
D Thermal runaway

Self-bias in JFET commonly uses

A Gate resistor only
B Collector resistor
C Transformer tap
D Source resistor

In JFET, gate current is nearly zero because gate junction is

A Forward biased
B Shorted
C Reverse biased
D Broken

MOSFET has extremely high input impedance mainly due to

A No oxide layer
B Gate insulation
C High base current
D Metal channel

MOSFET ohmic region is also called

A Cutoff region
B Breakdown region
C Negative region
D Linear region

MOSFET saturation occurs when Vds is

A Less than Vgs
B Greater than Vgs−Vt
C Equal to zero
D Negative always

CMOS logic mainly uses

A BJTs only
B Zener diodes
C Complementary MOSFETs
D Tunnel diodes

Gain–bandwidth improvement is a common result of

A Positive feedback
B Reverse biasing
C Zener action
D Negative feedback

Feedback factor represents the fraction of

A Output fed back
B Input added to output
C Noise removed
D Power dissipated

Barkhausen condition is linked to

A Rectification
B Oscillation
C Filtering
D Regulation

Clipping distortion in an amplifier occurs when

A Signal too small
B Temperature low
C Signal too large
D Frequency low

Harmonic distortion means output contains

A Only DC
B Only noise
C Only input frequency
D Multiple harmonics

Intermodulation distortion appears when amplifier handles

A One DC source
B Two frequencies
C Only noise
D Only pulses

A transistor used as a switch ideally operates in

A Active region only
B Breakdown region
C Cutoff and saturation
D Reverse active

Heat sink helps mainly by reducing

A Junction temperature
B Junction voltage
C Doping density
D Depletion width

CRO is mainly used to display

A Resistance value
B Voltage waveform
C Current gain
D Doping profile

A signal generator is used to provide

A Pure DC only
B Heat pulses
C Test waveforms
D Magnetic flux

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *