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In a non-degenerate bulk semiconductor with electron density n = 10^16 cm^−3, the value of ...

Question In a non-degenerate bulk semiconductor with electron density n = 10 16 cm −3 , the value of (E C − E Fn ) = 200 meV , where E C and E Fn denote the bottom of the conduction band and electron Fermi level energy, respectively. Assume the thermal voltage as 26 meV and the intrinsic carrier concentration as 10 10 cm −3 . For n = 0.5 × 10 16 cm −3 , the closest approximation of the value of (E C − E Fn ) is: 226 meV 174 meV 218 meV 182 meV Step-by-Step Solution Step 1: Write the Carrier Concentration Equation For a non-degenerate semiconductor, the electron concentration is given by: n = n i exp[(E Fn − E i ) / kT] Alternatively, E C − E Fn = kT ln(N C / n) Since the effective density of states...

5G Beam Steering Simulation (Between BS & MS)

5G Bi-Directional Beamforming & SINR Lab 5G BEAM STEERING SYSTEM BS & MS Joint Steering + Interference Cancellation System SINR -- dB RX Power -- dBm 1. gNodeB (Base Station) Antennas ($N_{BS}$): 16 Large arrays at the tower create narrow "Pencil Beams" to maximize range. 2. UE (Mobile Station) Antennas ($N_{MS}$): 4 ...

Clarke-Jakes model Explained

  Understanding Clarke-Jakes Model: The Foundation of Rayleigh Fading A comprehensive guide to the Clarke-Jakes model, the Doppler Bathtub Spectrum, and precision Coherence Time calculations in wireless communications. What is Clarke’s Model? Clarke’s Model (often called the Clarke-Jakes model) is the mathematical framework used to describe small-scale fading in mobile wireless channels. It explains how a signal behaves when a receiver moves through a dense multipath environment where there is no direct Line-of-Sight (NLOS). Key Assumptions: A fixed transmitter and a moving receiver. An infinite number of scatterers (rich multipath). Signals arrive from all horizontal directions (360°) with equal probability. The received signal envelope follows a Rayle...

Is the -174 dBm/Hz Noise Floor Formula Universal?

  Is the -174 dBm/Hz Noise Floor Formula Universal? Understanding the limits of thermal noise calculations in RF engineering. In the world of RF engineering and wireless communication, the formula for calculating the noise floor is treated as gospel. For most terrestrial applications, we use the standard benchmark: P noise (dBm) = -174 + 10 * log 10 (Bandwidth) + NF While this equation is incredibly robust for designing cellular networks, Wi-Fi systems, and satellite links, it is not a universal law of physics applicable to every frequency. Depending on your environment and operating frequency, this formula can lead to significant errors. Where Does the "-174" Come From? The value -174 dBm/Hz is derived from the thermal noise power spectral density equation, P = kTB . Under standard conditions: k: Boltzmann’s Constant (1.38 × 10 -23 J/K). T: Absolute temperature, traditionally set at 290 K (Standard Room Temperature). When you convert this to dBm per 1 Hz of bandwidth...

RF Noise Floor Simulation

RF Noise Floor Simulation Master the formula: P noise = 10log 10 (kTB) + NF Noise Floor: -100 dBm System Parameters Bandwidth (B) in MHz 20 Noise Figure (NF) in dB 5 Temperature (T) in Kelvin 290 Wi-Fi (20MHz) LoRa (125kHz) LTE (10MHz) Cryo-SDR (10K) Calculated Noise Floor -100.0 dBm Calculation breakdown will appear here... Sensitivity Tip Total Noise Floor represents the poi...

Consider a long rectangular bar of direct bandgap p-type semiconductor. The equilibrium hole density is ...

  For electron diffusion in a semiconductor, the excess electron concentration decays exponentially with distance: Δ n ( x ) = Δ n ( 0 ) e − x / L n \Delta n(x)=\Delta n(0)e^{-x/L_n} ​ where: Δ n ( x ) \Delta n(x) Δ n ( x ) = excess electron concentration at distance x x x Δ n ( 0 ) \Delta n(0) Δ n ( 0 ) = excess electron concentration at x = 0 x=0 x = 0 L n L_n L n ​ = electron diffusion length At the diffusion length x=L_n x =2 micrometer ​10^14 * e^(2/2) = .367 * 10^14 cm^-3 Option (1) GATE EC Previous Year Papers with Solutions → Electronics and Communication Study Material →

Fourier Transform of the signal x(t) = t/(1+t²)² is ___ | Complex Plane Integration

  Fourier Transform of \(x(t)=\dfrac{t}{(1+t^2)^2}\) We want to determine the Fourier transform of $$ x(t)=\frac{t}{(1+t^2)^2} $$ using the Fourier transform definition $$ X(\omega)=\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}x(t)e^{-j\omega t}\,dt $$ Step 1 : Let $$ x_1(t)=\frac{1}{1+t^2} $$ Then $$ X_1(\omega)=\pi e^{-|\omega|}. $$ Proof: $$ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\frac{1}{1+t^2}e^{-j\omega t}\,dt $$ Use the Residue Theorem. $$ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\frac{1}{1+z^2}e^{-j\omega z}\,dz $$ Or, $$ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\frac{1}{(z+j)(z-j)}e^{-j\omega z}\,dz $$ Poles are at \(z=-j\) and \(z=j\). For the pole at \(z=-j\): $$ \operatorname*{Res}_{z=-j}\left(\frac{e^{-j\omega z}}{(z+j)(z-j)}\right) = \lim_{z\to -j}(z+j)\frac{e^{-j\omega z}}{(z+j)(z-j)} = \frac{e^{-\omega}}{-2j}. $$ Therefore, $$ -2\pi j\left(\frac{e^{-\omega}}{-2j}\right) = \pi e^{-\omega}. $$ For the pole at \(z=j\): $$ \operatorname*{Res}_{z=j}\left(\frac{e^{-j\omega z}}{(z+j)(z-j)}\righ...

Effect of Noise in Amplitude Modulation (AM) Explained

  Effect of Noise in Amplitude Modulation (AM)  Understanding the effect of noise in amplitude modulation (AM) is one of the most important topics in Analog Communication Systems.  This article explains the complete derivation step by step, including: Transmitted AM signal Received signal equation Why noise is written in envelope-phase form Difference between r(t) and y(t) Envelope detector output Threshold effect Step 1: Transmitted AM Signal The transmitted amplitude modulated (AM) signal is s(t)=A c [1+k a m(t)]cos(2πf c t) where A c = Carrier amplitude m(t) = Message signal k a = Amplitude sensitivity f c = Carrier frequency Step 2: Noise is Added by the Channel Every communication channel introduces random noise. Let the channel noise be n(t) The received signal becomes r(t)=s(t)+n(t) This is the most fundamental equation in communication systems. Received Signal = Transmitted...

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