Everything about Darlington Transistor totally explained
In
electronics, the
Darlington transistor (often called a
Darlington pair) is a
semiconductor device which combines two
bipolar transistors in a single device so that the current amplified by the first is amplified further by the second. This gives a high current
gain (written β or h
FE), and takes less space than two discrete transistors in the same configuration. Integrated packaged devices are available, but it's still common also to use two separate transistors.
The Darlington configuration was invented by
Bell Laboratories engineer
Sidney Darlington in 1953. He
patented the idea of having two or three transistors on a single chip, but not that of an arbitrary number (which might have covered all modern
integrated circuits).
A similar configuration but with transistors of opposite type (NPN and PNP) is the
Sziklai pair, sometimes called the "complementary Darlington".
Behaviour
A Darlington pair behaves like a single transistor with a high current gain (the product of the gains of the two transistors):
»
Thus, for Si based technology, there must be about 0.7 V across both base-emitter junctions (connected in series in the device), so that we need about 1.4 V in total to turn on the device. The saturation voltage of a Darlington pair is about 0.7 V, which can cause substantial power dissipation. Another drawback is a reduction in switching speed, because the first transistor can't actively inhibit the base current of the second, which makes the device slow to switch off. To alleviate this, the second transistor often has a base resistor of a few hundred ohms.
The Darlington has more phase shift at high frequencies than a single transistor and hence can more easily become unstable with
feedback.
Darlington pairs are available as integrated packages or can be made from two discrete transistors; Q
1 (the left-hand transistor in the diagram) can be a low power type, but normally Q
2 (on the right) will need to be high power. The maximum collector current I
C(max) of the pair is that of Q
2. A typical integrated power device is the 2N6282, which includes a switch-off resistor and has a current gain of 2400 at I
C=10A.
A Darlington pair can be sensitive enough to respond to the current passed by skin contact even at safe voltages. Thus, it can form the input stage of a touch-sensitive switch.
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