Ch03 - Resistive Circuits
Ch03 - Resistive Circuits
1-1
The circuit being designed provides an
adjustable voltage, v, to the load circuit.
Resistive Circuits
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Section 3.3
R2= 20Ω
Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law (KVL): _ _
the algebraic sum of the voltages around
any closed path in a circuit is zero for all
Node 3
time.
Assume passive sign convention
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Node 1
R1=10Ω
i1 Node 2 KVL R1=10Ω
+ v1=50v _ + _
+ +
I=5A I +
V= 5v
v2=20v i2 R3= 5Ω
i3 +
R2= 20Ω v3=20v _ LOOP 1
_ _
R2= 20Ω _
Start
Node 1 +I - i1 = 0 Node 3
+V - vR1 - vR2 = 0
Node 2 +i1 - i2 - i3 = 0 i = V/(R1 + R2)
Use KCL and iV = iR1 = iR2 = i
Node 3 +i2 + i3 - I = 0 Ohm’s Law vR1 = iR1 = VR1 /(R1 + R2)
+V = iR1 + iR2
i2 = v2/R2 i3 = v3/R3 vR2 = iR2 = VR2/(R1 + R2)
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V = i(R1 + R2) 67 6
PROBLEM SOLVING METHOD steps taken
va vb Apply P.S.C. to passive elements.
node1 + _ node2 _ node3
Ra
+
Rb Show current direction at voltages
ia + ib sources.
ivs
+ Show voltage direction at current
vc
vs +
_ ic R
c loop2 is vis sources.
loop1 _ _
Name nodes and loops.
Name elements and sources.
node4 Name currents and voltages.
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WRITE THE
v
KCL EQUATIONS
v a b
WRITE THE KVL EQUATIONS
node1 + _ node2
+
_ node3 v v a b
Rb node1 + _ node2 _ node3
Ra +
Ra Rb
ia + ib
ivs ia + ib
+ ivs
+ ic R vc vis
+
vs _ loop1 is vc
c loop2 vs +
_ ic R is vis
_ _ loop1 c loop2
_ _
node4
node4
node1: ivs − ia = 0 node3: ib + i s = 0
loop1: loop2:
node2: ia − i b − i c = 0 node4: ic − i s − ivs = 0 + v s − va − vc = 0 + vc − vb − v is = 0
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WRITE SUPPLEMENTARY
EQUATIONS CIRCUIT REDUCTION (1)
va vb
node1 + _ node2
+ _ node3 10Ω 30Ω 45Ω
Ra Rb
ia + ib
ivs iT
+
+ ic R vc vis
vs _ loop1 is i1
c
_ loop2 _
+
_ 5v 15Ω 90Ω 50Ω
5Ω 100Ω
node4
ia = va / Ra ib = vb / Rb ic = vc / Rc
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CIRCUIT REDUCTION (2) CIRCUIT REDUCTION (3)
10Ω 30Ω 45Ω 10Ω 30Ω
iT iT
+ 15Ω 90Ω i1 50Ω + i1
_ 5v _ 5v 15Ω 90Ω 195Ω
5Ω 100Ω 5Ω
Begin with loop on far right. Again using the loop on the far right.
Combine the three resistors that are in The 90 Ω and 195 Ω resistors are in
series. parallel.
Req = 45+50+100 = 195Ω Req= (90)(195)/(90+195) = 61.58 Ω
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iT iT
+
_ 5v 15Ω 61.58Ω +
_ 5v 15Ω 91.58Ω
5Ω 5Ω
Still working with the loop on the far right. Again, the far right loop.
The 30 Ω and the 61.58 Ω resistors are in The 15 Ω and 91.58 Ω resistors are in
series. parallel.
Req = 30 + 61.58 = 91.58 Ω Req = (15)(91.58)/(15+91.58) = 12.9 Ω
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Now there is only one loop. Use Ohm’s Law to determine iT.
All the resistors are in series. iT = 5/27.9 = 0.179A
Req = 10+12.9+5 = 27.9 Ω iT flows in all three resistors, the 12.9 Ω
resistor is the equivalent resistance of
67 17 the entire circuit beyond
67 points a and b18.
CIRCUIT REDUCTION (8) CIRCUIT REDUCTION (9)
10Ω 30Ω a
10Ω a
0.01724 = 7.96mA _
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_ _
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Example:
More Terminal Law Equivalent Subcircuits
Two two-terminal subcircuits are said to Find the terminal laws
be equivalent if they have the same
terminal law i i 1Ω
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Example:
Single-Loop Circuit Single-Loop Circuit
A single loop circuit is one which has only a i R1
single loop i
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Section 3.4
R2
P2 = Pt ×
R1 + R2
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Some Comments Example (cont’d)10/6
Adding parallel resistors can only From the example:
increase the equivalent conductance, or i G
decrease the equivalent resistance i1 = G1v = G1 = 1i
Gp Gp
Putting resistors in parallel reduces the
overall resistance below that of any of Similarly:
them individually G2 G3
i2 = i and i3 = i
For N equal R Ω resistors in parallel, Gp Gp
Rp = R / N
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Section 3.5
Current Division
is=i1+i2
i1=v/R1 i2=v/R2
Let G=1/R
is=G1v+G2v
G1i s G2i s R 1i s
VS=V1=V2=…=Vn i1 = i2 = =
G1 + G 2 G1 + G 2 R 1 + R 2
I1=? I2=?
is與i1 i2 ..之關係為何?
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Example
Gn is Gn is
in = = N R1=1/2 Ω, R2=1/4 Ω, R3=1/8 Ω
∑G n
Gp Gp=G1+G2+G3
n =1 =2+4+8=14
i1=(G1*is)/GP=(2*28)/14=4A
i2=(G2*is)/GP=(4*28)/14=8A
i2=(G3*is)/GP=(8*28)/14=16A
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兩電阻並聯 三電阻並聯
(1)兩電阻並聯(如圖4-8) (2)三電阻並聯(如圖4-9)
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Current Division
Figure E 3.5-1 The current through parallel resistors
(a) A parallel divides up in direct proportion to their
resistor network. conductance
Courtesy of Dale Current Divider: Smaller resistances
Electronics. (larger conductances) have larger
(b) The connected current flows in a current divider
circuit uses four
resistors where R =
1kΩ.
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Section 3.6
i1 i2 i3 i4 +
_
i
(a) A circuit containing voltage sources
connected in series and (b) an equivalent
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circuit. 67 56
Section 3.6
+
_ vsN Series voltage sources add
_ _
v = vs1 + vs 2 + L + vsN v = vs
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+ +
(a) A circuit containing is1
circuit. isN
_ _
is1 = is 2 = L = isN i = is
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Parallel Current Sources More Parallel Current Sources
i i A set of parallel current sources is
equivalent to a single current source
+ +
whose source function is the sum of the
v v is
parallel source functions
is1 is2 isN
_ _ Parallel current sources add
i = is1 + is 2 + L + isN i = is
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Comparison Example
Single-loop circuit:
series interconnection,
voltage division,
KCL
Single-node-pair circuit:
parallel interconnection,
current division,
KVL
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