From some practice problems I'm working on for my electronics exam:
A Common Source (CS) MOSFET amplifier is biased at \$I_D=0.25 mA\$ with a current source connected at the Source terminal of the MOSFET. The transistor has \$V_{OV}=0.3V\$, and a drain resistance of \$R_D=15 > k\Omega\$ connected to the DC supply of \$15V\$. The device has \$V_A=50V\$. The amplifier is capacitively fed from a source with internal resistance \$R_{sig}=100 k\Omega\$, and a \$20 k\Omega\$ load is capacitively coupled to the drain of the amplifier.
(a)Draw the schematic for the amplifier system. (b)Calculate the voltage gain of the system.
This seems to imply that the MOSFET should be in linear mode, however when I draw out the schematic things just don't add up:
simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab
In my DC analysis, the current through \$R1\$ must be \$0.25mA\$ therefore the voltage drop across \$R1\$ is \$0.25mA \times 15k\Omega = 3.75V\$. But, and here is where I think I'm screwing up, \$V_S = 0V\$ therefore \$V_{DS}=15V - 3.75V = 11.25V\$ which is way over \$V_{OV}=0.3V\$!
Doesn't this mean that the MOSFET is actually in saturation mode?
I assume I'm either forgetting or unaware of something basic... please set me straight.