On Dec 23, 9:35 am, war_of_justice <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi all, does anyone knows whether electric can be used for BJT
> simulation? If yes, where can i find some of these models to carry out
> some simulation...
>
> Thank You
>
> On Dec 23, 12:55 pm, pallav <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > On Dec 22, 11:34 pm, war_of_justice <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I am currently a student of Nanyang Technological University of
> > > Singapore working on my final year project which required the use of
> > > electric. There is a C5_models.txt in electric link which comprises of
> > > only n and p mos model. May i know Is there any other process that
> > > support Bipolar junction transistors (BJT) for Electric and where can
> > > i download those processes? Thank You very much
>
> > Try looking at the available process 
> > here:http://www.mosis.com/products/fab/vendors/
>
> > In particular, the TSMC mixed-mode processes. You can try contacting
> > MOSIS on how to obtain SPICE models for the BJT.
>
> > Good luck.


The NPN/PNP transistors on the schematic panel are the BJT
transistors. Electric will generate the SPICE deck for you. However, I
don't think Electric provides models for the devices themselves.
Depending upon the technology process you are interested in, you can
contact MOSIS (or a different foundry), sign a NDA and have access to
the BJT models for a particular process. Alternatively, if you are
just interested in doing simulation, you can take a look at this:
http://www.seas.upenn.edu/~jan/spice/spice.overview.html#Bipolar

Although I haven't tried it, I think a SPICE simulator should have a
default/basic BJT model.

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