Okay, so today I messed around with MOSFETs, specifically trying to get them into the saturation region. It’s kind of like finding that sweet spot where your transistor acts like a wide-open faucet, letting the current flow freely.

First off, I grabbed my MOSFET – I think it was an N-channel one, but don’t quote me on that. You need to hook it up right, you know? So, I connected the drain to the positive side of my power supply through a resistor. This resistor is there to prevent everything from going boom – very important. The source, I just grounded that directly. Simple enough.
Now, the gate, that’s where the magic happens. I used a separate power supply to feed voltage to the gate. You start low, and watch what happens to the current flowing between the drain and source. You can see this on a multimeter or, even better, an oscilloscope if you’ve got one.
- I started with the gate voltage at zero. Nothing much happens there, it is just like a closed door.
- Then, I slowly cranked up the gate voltage, bit by bit.
- As I did this, I could see the drain-source current starting to climb.
At first, the current increases pretty proportionally to the gate voltage. We were in the linear region – not quite where I wanted to be.
But then, you hit this point where even though you’re increasing the gate voltage, the drain-source current kind of plateaus. It just stops rising at the same rate. Bam! That is the saturation region. You have found it. The faucet is open all the way, and no matter how much more you twist the handle (increase the gate voltage), the water (current) isn’t going to flow any faster.
I played around with this for a while, tweaking the gate voltage and seeing how the current responded. It was pretty cool to see it happen in real-time and get a feel for how these things behave.

What did I learn today?
Getting a MOSFET into saturation is all about finding that threshold voltage for the gate. Once you’re above that, you are golden. The transistor is fully “on,” and you have got maximum current flow. Pretty neat stuff. And the whole process, it was not as scary as I thought it would be. Just take it slow, double-check your connections, and you will be fine.