Transistor transfer curve

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Thanks,

so the nonlinearity of the transistor is caused by the current depending
change of the average 0.6V voltage drop ?

I noticed that the transfer curve of a mosfet just goes into the other direction.
Is it possible to combine both to get a more linear device ?
 
There are many different non-linearities in a transistor caused by various factors. There is no simple answer if you want to account for all of these. The equation I stated is the fundamental relationship in the transistor (ie. the BJT). As Eva mentioned, also Vce affects Vbe. That is because Vce, or to be more exact, Vcb, affects the base width and thus modulates the value of the "constant" Is, in the formula above. This effect also modulates hfe, ie. the Ic/Ib realationship, to vary with Vcb. However, hfe also varies with Ic, for at least two different reasons, which is why a plot of hfe against Ic is not a straight line. Then we have the base-collector capacitance which has a value which depends non-linearly on Vcb, making this capacitance effectively be modulated by Vcb. These are probably the major non-linearities.

BJTs and FETs (of whatever kind) will not cancel each others non-linearities, since the fundamental relationship (Ic vs. Vbe and Id vs. Vgs) is exponential for the BJT but polynomial for FETs. What might be possible in certain cases would be to make two BJTs cancel each other (or two FETs), but that is probably difficult to achieve in most cases.
 
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