Electronic – Necessity of a current mirror circuit – MOSFET/BJT

bjtcurrentmirror

I am studying the current mirror circuit.

I already went through similar questions and answers
on this forum. But I was unable to get clarity from the answers. I am just a beginner. I request if you can answer in simple terms in steps for my benefit.
I myself had asked similar question but I was not able to understand the answers. I went back and tried to understand and still was not able to get clarity. So, please help.

  1. What is the purpose of using a diode connected BJT? Won't a normal Diode be sufficient in place of BJT?

Current Mirror Circuit

I understand it is a very simple circuit but I am not able to understand how does this circuit establish current in Q1 and Q2 to be same?

Can someone explain me the basic concepts to help me understand this?

  1. What is the necessity to establish a constant current using this method? Why can't we use a single transistor and control the Vbe and Ib of it to produce a constant current? Why do we need two transistors to complicate this? Please help me understand this.

  2. While considering Q2, proper biasing is giving by Q1. Vbe of Q1 and Q2 are same. But should it mean that collector current of both the transistors are same? I understand that both are identical transistors in their geometry. But how does the current be same?

  3. I also understand that Q1 must be in saturation and for Q2 to establish a constant current, Q2 should be in active region,right? So that, if the voltage Vout is increased,Q2 will vary its Vce to provide constant Iout. Is this correct?

Best Answer

  1. The V-I characteristics of the diode-connected transistor and the controlled transistor need to be the same. You wouldn't get that with a diode and a transistor.

  2. Current mirrors are used in integrated circuits, where transistors are cheap and most other components are expensive. How would you control Vbe to get the collector current you want? How about using the cheapest component available to do the job? That cheapest component is a transistor.

  3. The collector currents are the same by virtue of the fact that the transistors are matched. Because they are matched, the Vbe generated in Q1 matches the Vbe needed to generate the same collector current in Q2

  4. Q1 is not in saturation. Saturation happens when the base-collector diode is forward biased enough that current would flow from base collector in the absence of emitter current. Vbc of Q1 is zero, so the junction there is not forward biased at all.