Hi Ed,
BigEd wrote:
Don't mistake depletion-mode nMOS with ordinary pMOS - they are not the same at all. All nMOS transistors have increasing conduction as the gate voltage increases, whereas pMOS have increasing conduction as the gate voltage decreases. The point about depletion-mode nMOS is that their threshold is much reduced compared to ordinary enhancement-mode nMOS. Indeed, it's negative. So they are always on, given that the gate voltage on a chip doesn't normally go negative. In normal configuration, they act more like resistors than switches - and that's enough to figure out their logical behaviour.
Are you saying that depletion-mode nMOS transistor's n-channel is ALWAYS open so that the current comes down from the voltage toward "drain" before it goes through the n-channel toward source until it reaches V-output to another nMOS transistor's gate?
It looks like that depletion-mode nMOS transistor is not necessarily to be turned ON always, but its gate ignores above 1 voltage up to 5 voltage while its n-channel is ALWAYS open. In other words, depletion-mode and enhancement-mode nMOS transistors are identical, but the difference is that the n-channel of depletion-mode nMOS transistor allows the current to go through its n-channel at unlimited time and the n-channel of enhancement-mode nMOS transistor's n-channel can be manipulated by the gate to open or close its n-channel as it acts like a switch.
Are you positive sure if there is NO current to be flowed toward the gate of depletion-mode nMOS transistor? If its gate receives below 0 V into negative, then any negative voltage has NO current present.
Take care,
Bryan