Chapter 1 DC Circuit
Chapter 1 DC Circuit
Chapter 1 DC Circuit
Direct-Current Circuits
DEFINATIONS
Linear elements : In an electric circuit, a linear element is an electrical
element with a linear relationship between current and voltage. Resistors are
the most common example of a linear element; other examples include
capacitors, inductors, and transformers.
Nonlinear Elements :A nonlinear element is one which does not have a
linear input/output relation. In a diode, for example, the current is a nonlinear function of the voltage . Most semiconductor devices have non-linear
characteristics.
Active Elements :The elements which generates or produces electrical
energy are called active elements. Some of the examples are batteries,
generators , transistors, operational amplifiers , vacuum tubes etc.
Passive Elements :All elements which consume rather than produce
energy are called passive elements, like resistors, Inductors and capacitors.
Electric Current
Resistance and Ohms Law
Energy and Power in Electric Circuits
Resistors in Series and Parallel
Kirchhoffs Rules
Circuits Containing Capacitors
RC Circuits
Ammeters and Voltmeters
Electric Current
Electric current is the flow of electric charge from
one place to another.
Electric Current
A battery uses chemical reactions to produce a
potential difference between its terminals. It
causes current to flow through the flashlight
bulb similar to the way the person lifting the
water causes the water to flow through the
paddle wheel.
Electric Current
A battery that is disconnected from any circuit
has an electric potential difference between its
terminals that is called the electromotive force or
emf:
Remember despite its name, the emf is an
electric potential, not a force.
The amount of work it takes to move a charge
Q from one terminal to the other is:
Electric Current
The direction of current flow from the positive
terminal to the negative one was decided
before it was realized that electrons are
negatively charged. Therefore, current flows
around a circuit in the direction a positive charge
would move;
electrons move
the other way.
However, this
does not matter
in most circuits.
Electric Current
Finally, the actual motion of electrons along a
wire is quite slow; the electrons spend most of
their time bouncing around randomly, and have
only a small velocity component opposite to
the direction of the current. (The electric signal
propagates much more quickly!)
5 Kirchhoffs Rules
More complex circuits cannot be broken down
into series and parallel pieces.
For these circuits, Kirchhoffs rules are useful.
The junction rule is a consequence of charge
conservation; the loop rule is a consequence
of energy conservation.
5 Kirchhoffs Rules
The junction rule: At any junction, the current
entering the junction must equal the current
leaving it.
5 Kirchhoffs Rules
The loop rule: The algebraic sum of the potential
differences around a closed loop must be zero (it
must return to its original value at the original
point).
5 Kirchhoffs Rules
Using Kirchhoffs rules:
The variables for which you are solving are the
currents through the resistors.
You need as many independent equations as
you have variables to solve for.
You will need both loop and junction rules.
Capacitors connected in
series do not have the
same potential difference
across them, but they do
all carry the same charge.
The total potential
difference is the sum of the
potential differences
across each one.
7 RC Circuits
In a circuit containing
only batteries and
capacitors, charge
appears almost
instantaneously on the
capacitors when the
circuit is connected.
However, if the circuit
contains resistors as
well, this is not the case.
7 RC Circuits
Using calculus, it can be shown that the charge
on the capacitor increases as:
And
7 RC Circuits
Here is the charge vs. time for an RC circuit:
7 RC Circuits
It can be shown that the current in the circuit
has a related behavior:
Transients Analysis
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
dx(t )
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
The complete solution consists of two parts:
the homogeneous solution (natural solution)
the particular solution (forced solution)
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
x N (t ) 0 or
dt
dt
x N (t )
dxN (t )
dt
,
x N (t )
x N (t ) e t /
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
dxF (t )
xF (t ) K S F
dt
x F (t ) K S F for t 0
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
The complete
response is:
the natural response +
the forced response
x x N (t ) xF (t )
e t / K S F
e t / x ( )
for t 0
x(t 0) x(0) x()
x(0) x()
The Complete
solution:
Figure 5.1
Transients Analysis
1. Solve first-order RC or RL circuits.
2. Understand the concepts of transient
response and steady-state response.
3. Relate the transient response of firstorder
circuits to the time constant.
Transients
The solution of the differential equation
represents are response of the circuit. It
is called natural response.
response.
ic
iR
i 0,
iC iR 0
dvC t vC t
C
0
dt
R
dvC t vC t
C
0
dt
R
dvC t
RC
vC t 0
dt
vC t Ke
RC
vC t Ke
t RC
vC (0 ) Vi
Ke
st
RCKse Ke 0
st
st
0 / RC
vC t Vi e
t RC
vC t Vi e t
RC
vC t Vi (1 et RC )
Exponential rising
waveform
RC is called the time
constant.
At time constant, the
voltage is 63.2% of the
RC CIRCUIT
t=0
i(t)
+
_
t=0
+
VC
Vu(t)
+
_
0-,
i(t)
R
C
+
VC
-
Vu(t)
for t =
i(t) = 0
u(t) is voltage-step function
RC CIRCUIT
iR iC
vu(t ) vC
dvC
iR
, iC C
R
dt
dvC
RC
vC V , v u (t ) V for t 0
dt
Vu(t)
Complete Response
Complete response
= natural response + forced response
Natural response (source free response) is
due to the initial condition
Forced response is the due to the external
excitation.
Figure
5.17,
5.18
a).
iC
R
Vs
Apply KCL
+ VR -
+
Vc
-
iR iC
vs v R
dvC
iR
, iC C
R
dt
dvC
1
1
vR
vs
dt
RC
RC
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
dx(t )
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
The complete solution consits of two parts:
the homogeneous solution (natural solution)
the particular solution (forced solution)
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
dxN (t )
dxN (t )
x (t )
x N (t ) 0 or
N
dt
dt
x N (t ) e t /
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
dxF (t )
xF (t ) K S F
dt
x F (t ) K S F for t 0
response is:
the natural
response +
the forced
x x N (t ) xF (t )
response
e t / K S F
e t / x ( )
for t 0
x(t 0) x(0) x()
x(0) x()
The Complete
solution:
Example
iR
+ VR 100 k
ohms
100V
0.01
microF
iC
+
Vc
-
iR
Example
+ VR iC
100 k
ohms
100V
0.01
microF
+
Vc
-
dx(t )
x(t ) K s f (t )
dt
x x N (t ) xF (t )
e
e
t /
vc 100 Ae
t
103
As vc (0) 0, 0 100 A
and
t /
KS F
x ( )
A 100
vc 100 100e
t
103
pdt
dv
t
t Cv dt
o
dt
C tt vdv
1
2
2
C v(t ) v(to )
2
1 2
wc (t ) Cv
2
RC CIRCUIT
R
WR 0 p R dt
2
Vo R(
1
2
CVo
2
1
2t / RC
)e
|0
2 RC
RL CIRCUITS
Initial condition
i(t = 0) = Io
i(t)
VR
+
di
vR vL 0 Ri L
dt
+
L di
VL
i 0
R dt
Solving the differential equation
RL CIRCUITS
VR
+
di R
i0
dt L
i(t)
i ( t ) di
di
R
dt,
Io
i
L
i
+
R t
R
L
VL
i
ln i |I o t |o
L
R
ln i ln I o t
Initial condition
L
Rt / L
i(t = 0) = Io
i (t ) I o e
R
dt
o
L
RL CIRCUIT
Power dissipation in the
resistor is:
i(t)
VR
+
2R = I 2e-2Rt/LR
p
=
i
R
Total
energyoturned into heat in
the resistor
2
W
p
dt
I
R
R
oR
+
VL
-
I o2 R(
e 2 Rt / L dt
L 2 Rt / L
)e
|0
2R
1 2
LI o
2
1 2
It is expected as the energy stored in theLIinductor
o
2
i(t)
Vu(t)
+
_
Vu(t)
+
VL
-
RL CIRCUIT
di
Ri L V
dt
Ldi
dt
V Ri
Integrating both sides,
L
ln(V Ri ) t k
R
L
i (0 ) 0, thus k ln V
R
L
[ln(V Ri ) ln V ] t
R
V Ri
e Rt / L
or
V
V V Rt / L
i e
, for t 0
R R