Common drain


In electronics, a common-drain amplifier, also known as a source follower, is one of three basic single-stage field effect transistor amplifier topologies, typically used as a voltage buffer. In this circuit the gate terminal of the transistor serves as the input, the source is the output, and the drain is common to both, hence its name. The analogous bipolar junction transistor circuit is the common-collector amplifier. This circuit is also commonly called a "stabilizer."
In addition, this circuit is used to transform impedances. For example, the Thévenin resistance of a combination of a voltage follower driven by a voltage source with high Thévenin resistance is reduced to only the output resistance of the voltage follower. That resistance reduction makes the combination a more ideal voltage source. Conversely, a voltage follower inserted between a driving stage and a high load presents an infinite resistance to the driving stage—an advantage in coupling a voltage signal to a large load.

Characteristics

At low frequencies, the source follower pictured at right has the following small signal characteristics.
DefinitionExpressionApproximate expressionConditions
Current gain
Voltage gain
Input impedance
Output impedance

The variable gm that is not listed in the schematic is the transconductance of the device.