Chapter 5
Chapter 5
Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. © 2010 Pearson Higher Education,
Floyd Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights Reserved
Combination circuits
Most practical circuits have combinations of series
and parallel components. You can frequently
simplify analysis by combining series and parallel
components.
An important analysis method is to form an equivalent
circuit. An equivalent circuit is one that has
characteristics that are electrically the same as
another circuit but is generally simpler.
Combination circuits
For example:
R1
1 .0 k is equivalent to R1
2 .0 k
R2
1 .0 k
Another example:
is equivalent to
R1 R2 R 1 ,2
1 .0 k 1 .0 k 500
R1
1 .0 k R3 R 1 ,2 R3
R2 4 .7 k 3 .7 k 4 .7 k
2 .7 k
is equivalent to
R2
I 470 W
+ + - R4
VS 18.5 mA
5.0 V
100 W
R1 R3 R5
270 W 330 W 100 W
R6
100 W
R1
VS + 270 W
10 V
Combination
R2 R3
circuit 330 W 470 W
d. R2 is in parallel with R3
Quiz
500 W 1.0 k W
Quiz
Answers:
1. b 6. c
2. c 7. a
3. d 8. a
4. d 9. d
5. b 10. c