The MMBT3904LT1G operates as an NPN bipolar junction transistor (BJT), using current-controlled current amplification to switch or amplify signals.
Active Mode: When the base-emitter junction is forward-biased (VBE > 0.65 V typical) and the base-collector junction is reverse-biased, the transistor operates in the active region. A small base current (IB) controls a much larger collector current (IC) through current gain (hFE = IC/IB). With hFE ranging from 40 to 300, the MMBT3904LT1G can amplify small signals or drive moderate loads with minimal base drive.
Saturation Mode: When both junctions are forward-biased (VCE drops to VCE(sat) ≈ 0.2 V), the transistor is fully on, acting as a closed switch between collector and emitter. The low saturation voltage minimizes power dissipation in switching applications. To ensure hard saturation, the base current should exceed IC/hFE by a factor of 2-10 (overdrive factor).
Cutoff Mode: With the base-emitter junction reverse-biased or at zero bias, both junctions are reverse-biased and only tiny leakage currents flow (ICEX < 50 nA). The transistor acts as an open switch.
Switching Behavior: Transition between cutoff and saturation is governed by charge storage in the base region. Turn-on delay (35 ns) and rise time (35 ns) are fast due to rapid charge injection. Turn-off involves removing stored base charge, with storage time (200 ns) dominating the total turn-off period. Fall time is 50 ns. The 300 MHz transition frequency indicates the gain-bandwidth product, beyond which current gain drops below unity.
Small-Signal Operation: In the active region, the transistor presents an input impedance (hie) of 1.0-10 kΩ, voltage feedback ratio (hre) of 0.5-8.0 × 10⁻⁴, small-signal current gain (hfe) of 100-400, and output admittance (hoe) of 1.0-40 μmhos at IC = 1 mA. These parameters make it suitable for low-frequency amplification stages.
Thermal Behavior: The VBE temperature coefficient is approximately -2 mV/°C, meaning the base-emitter voltage decreases with rising temperature. This characteristic must be accounted for in bias circuit design to maintain stable operating points across temperature.