Electronic – Voltage at common node in transistor

pnptransistors

This is a rather elementary question but I think my fundamentals are not clear on this. What is the voltage at the common node?

Transistor Node

Firstly, I thought voltage was taken across something i.e it's taken with a reference to some other voltage. How can we say what is the voltage at the node? My professor claims that the voltage at that node will be Vcc since the negative of the battery Vee has zero voltage and the positive of Vcc is Vcc.

He also claims that voltage Vcc should be greater than Vee to keep the Emitter Base Junction in forward bias and Collector Base in Reverse Bias. Why is this?

I am also perplexed in other bjt configurations- Common Emmitter.

NPN Transistor Image

What is the voltage at the common node here and how do I know if they are properly biased in their active region?

Best Answer

Voltage is indeed taken with reference to something. It is a potential difference between two points. So you cannot just say "this node is at 5 volts", it has to be "this node is at 5 volts relative to this node".
Usually, to make things easier we define a circuit reference point, e.g. circuit ground so we can measure all voltages relative to this. Then in this case you will hear "this node is at 5 volts" and can assume it is relative to the reference point.

So in your first circuit above, you need a reference point to determine the voltage at the node. If your professor said "the negative of the battery has zero voltage", this would be incorrect. You could say that the negative of the battery is your zero volt reference, or circuit ground, in which case the node pointed to is at Vcc.

Usually you will have a symbol representing circuit ground, such as this one:

ground symbol

We can see it used at the bottom of this circuit, and the voltages in reference to it :

circuit using ground symbol

There are different ground symbols, depending on what the actual reference point is (e.g. the earth underfoot, a metal chassis, or a local circuit ground on a PCB):

Various grounds

Your last example is drawn confusingly (as Phil says, you rarely have two batteries in a circuit like this) It's actually a common collector circuit, and the common point is at 5V here (relative to the circuit ground symbol):

Common COllector