Pentode transistor

A pentode transistor is any transistor having five active terminals.

Early pentode transistors

One early pentode transistor was developed in the early 1950s as an improvement over the point-contact transistor.

  • A point-contact transistor having three emitters. It became obsolete in the middle 1950s.

Pentode field-effect transistors having 3 gates, similar to vacuum tube pentodes have also been described[1]

Modern pentode transistors

  • Triple emitter transistor in three input transistor-transistor logic gates.
  • Triple collector transistor in three output integrated injection logic gates.
  • Field effect transistor having three gates.

References

  1. ^ US Patent 4,104,673 August 1,1978
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