Gummel–Poon model
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Gummel-Poon Model is a model of the bipolar junction transistor. It was first described in a paper published by H.K. Gummel and H.C. Poon at Bell Labs in 1970[1].
The Gummel–Poon model and modern variants of it are widely used via incorporation in the popular circuit simulators known as SPICE. When certain parameters are omitted, SPICE reverts to the simpler Ebers–Moll model.
[edit] References
- ^ H. K. Gummel and R. C. Poon, "An integral charge control model of bipolar transistors," Bell Syst. Tech. J., vol. 49, pp. 827--852, May-June 1970
[edit] External links
- Agilent manual: The Gummel–Poon Bipolar Model as implemented in the simulator SPICE
- Designers-Guide.org comparison paper Xiaochong Cao, J. McMacken, K. Stiles, P. Layman, Juin J. Liou, Adelmo Ortiz-Conde, and S. Moinian, "Comparison of the New VBIC and Conventional Gummel–Poon Bipolar Transistor Models," IEEE Trans-ED 47 #2, Feb. 2000.