lec_week6
lec_week6
Methods of Analysis
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Methods of Analysis - Chapter 3
3.1 Motivation
3.2 Nodal analysis.
3.3 Nodal analysis with voltage sources.
3.4 Mesh analysis.
3.5 Mesh analysis with current sources.
3.6 Nodal and mesh analysis by inspection.
3.7 Nodal versus mesh analysis.
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3.1 Motivation (1)
If you are given the following circuit, how can
we determine (1) the voltage across each
resistor, (2) current through each resistor. (3)
power generated by each current source, etc.
Example 1
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3.2 Nodal Analysis (2)
Steps to determine the node voltages:
Apply KCl at
node 1 and 2 v1 v2
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3.3 Nodal Analysis with
Voltage Source (3)
Basic steps:
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3.3 Nodal Analysis with
Voltage Source (4)
Example 5 – circuit with independent voltage source
Super-node => 2-i1-i2-7 = 0
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3.3 Nodal Analysis with
Voltage Source (6)
Example 7 – circuit with two independent voltage
sources
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3.4 Mesh Analysis (2)
Steps to determine the mesh currents:
Note:
i1 and i2 are mesh current (imaginative, not measurable directly)
I1, I2 and I3 are branch current (real, measurable directly)
I1 = i1; I2 = i2; I3 = i1 - i2
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*Refer to in-class illustration, textbook
3.4 Mesh Analysis (4)
Example 9 – circuit with dependent voltage source
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*Refer to in-class illustration, textbook, answer Io = 1.5A
3.5 Mesh Analysis with
Current Source (1)
Circuit with current source
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3.6 Nodal and Mesh Analysis
with Inspection (1)
The properties of a super-mesh:
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3.6 Nodal and Mesh Analysis
with Inspection (2)
Example 10 – By inspection, write the nodal voltage equations
for the circuit
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*Refer to in-class illustration, textbook
3.6 Nodal and Mesh Analysis
with Inspection (3)
Example 11 – By inspection, write the mesh-current equations
for the circuit
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*Refer to in-class illustration, textbook
3.7 Nodal versus Mesh
Analysis (1)
To select the method that results in the smaller number of
equations. For example: