Electrical Engineering Department: EE 202: Electric Circuits I Second Semester, 2015 - 2016
Electrical Engineering Department: EE 202: Electric Circuits I Second Semester, 2015 - 2016
EE 202: Electric Circuits I
Second Semester, 2015 – 2016 (152)
Lecture (21)
Chapter 6: Inductance and Capacitance
1
6.1 The Inductor
However the inductor is capable of storing energy in the magnetic field which can be released
Note from the above Eq. that the voltage across the terminals of an inductor
is proportional to the time rate of change of the current in the inductor.
First, if the current is constant, the voltage across the ideal inductor is zero. Thus the inductor behaves as a
short circuit in the presence of a constant, or dc, current.
Second, current cannot change instantaneously in an inductor; that is, the current cannot change by a finite
amount in zero time. Above Equation tells us that this change would require an infinite voltage, and infinite
voltages are not possible.
For example, when someone opens the switch on an inductive circuit in an actual system, the current initially
continues to flow in the air across the switch, a phenomenon called arcing.
The arc across the switch prevents the current from dropping to zero instantaneously.
Switching inductive circuits is an important engineering problem, because arcing and voltage surges must be
controlled to prevent equipment damage
Example
6.1
Since the maximum will occur where the derivative of the current is zero
>>
b) Sketch the current waveform.
Solution
Solution
(d) Sketch the voltage across the terminals of the inductor ?
Solution
For 0 < t < 0.2 S, the current is increasing >> di/dt is (+ve) >> Voltage = L di/dt is also (+ve)
For 0.2 < t , the current is decreasing >> di/dt is (-ve) >> Voltage = L di/dt is also (-ve)
Answer:
At t = 0.2 s which corresponds to the
moment when di/dt is passing through
Zero and changing sign
g) Is there ever an instantaneous change in voltage
across the inductor? If so, at what time?
Answer
Yes, at t = 0.
Note that the voltage can change instantaneously across the terminals
of an inductor.
Current in an Inductor in Terms of the Voltage Across the Inductor
Since
OR
Hint >>>
(c) Sketch the current i(t) ?
Note the inductor current i(t) approaches a constant value of 2 A as t approaches infinity.
As v(t) is a always (+ve) as shown below >> the current should be always increasing (di/dt = +ve)