Title: Announcement:
1Lecture 6
- Announcement
- Lecture Notes Competition
- Next Tuesday 240 Cory Homework Box or
electronically to me. - One winner per week (if two people submitted
together, they share one prize). - Winner gets 10 book coupons each time. You can
exchange the book coupons for prizes (TBD) in the
last lecture. - OUTLINE
- Superposition
- Thévenin and Norton equivalent circuits
- Maximum Power Transfer
- Reading
- Chapter 2
2Circuit Analysis Approaches
- The Node-Voltage method can always be used to
solve a circuit, but techniques for simplifying
circuits (using equivalent circuits) are
useful - series and parallel combination reductions
- D-Y and Y-D conversions
- source transformations
- Thevenin and Norton equivalent circuits
- (to be covered in Lecture 8)
3A Note of Caution
- These two resistive circuits are equivalent for
voltages and currents external to the Y and D
circuits. Internally, the voltages and currents
are different.
RbRc Ra Rb Rc
RaRc Ra Rb Rc
RaRb Ra Rb Rc
R1
R2
R3
4Circuit Simplification Example
- Find the equivalent resistance Rab
2W
2W
a
a
18W
12W
6W
4W
9W
b
4W
9W
b
5Superposition
- A linear circuit is one constructed only of
linear elements (linear resistors, and linear
capacitors and inductors, linear dependent
sources) and independent sources. Linear - means I-V charcteristic of elements/sources are
straight lines when plotted - Principle of Superposition
- In any linear circuit containing multiple
independent sources, the current or voltage at
any point in the network may be calculated as the
algebraic sum of the individual contributions of
each source acting alone.
6Superposition
- Procedure
- Determine contribution due to one independent
source - Set all other sources to 0 Replace independent
voltage - source by short circuit, independent current
source by open - circuit
- Repeat for each independent source
- Sum individual contributions to obtain desired
voltage - or current
7Superposition Example
4 V
2 W
Vo
24 V
4 W
4 A
8Equivalent Circuit Concept
- A network of voltage sources, current sources,
and resistors can be replaced by an equivalent
circuit which has identical terminal properties
(I-V characteristics) without affecting the
operation of the rest of the circuit.
iA
iB
network A of sources and resistors
network B of sources and resistors
vA _
vB _
iA(vA) iB(vB)
9Source Combinations
- Voltage sources in series can be replaced by an
equivalent voltage source - Current sources in parallel can be replaced by an
equivalent current source
v1
v1v2
v2
i1i2
i1
i2
10Thévenin Equivalent Circuit
- Any linear 2-terminal (1-port) network of indep.
voltage sources, indep. current sources, and
linear resistors can be replaced by an equivalent
circuit consisting of an independent voltage
source in series with a resistor without
affecting the operation of the rest of the
circuit.
Thévenin equivalent circuit
RTh
a
a
network of sources and resistors
vL
vL
iL
iL
VTh
RL
RL
b
b
load resistor
11I-V Characteristic of Thévenin Equivalent
- The I-V characteristic for the series combination
of elements is obtained by adding their voltage
drops
For a given current i, the voltage drop vab is
equal to the sum of the voltages dropped across
the source (VTh) and across the resistor (iRTh)
i
RTh
a
v
i
vab
vab VTh iR
VTh
b
I-V characteristic of resistor v iR
I-V characteristic of voltage source v VTh
12Thévenin Equivalent Example
- Find the Thevenin equivalent with respect to the
terminals a,b
13RTh Calculation Example 1
- Set all independent sources to 0
14Comments on Dependent Sources
- A dependent source establishes a voltage or
current - whose value depends on the value of a voltage or
- current at a specified location in the circuit.
- (device model, used to model behavior of
transistors amplifiers) - To specify a dependent source, we must identify
- the controlling voltage or current (must be
calculated, in general) - the relationship between the controlling voltage
or current and the supplied voltage or current - the reference direction for the supplied voltage
or current - The relationship between the dependent source
- and its reference cannot be broken!
- Dependent sources cannot be turned off for
various purposes (e.g. to find the Thévenin
resistance, or in analysis using Superposition).
15RTh Calculation Example 2
- Find the Thevenin equivalent with respect to the
terminals a,b
16Networks Containing Time-Varying Sources
- Care must be taken in summing time-varying
sources! - Example
10 sin (100t)
1 kW
20 cos (100t)
1 kW
17Norton Equivalent Circuit
- Any linear 2-terminal (1-port) network of indep.
voltage sources, indep. current sources, and
linear resistors can be replaced by an equivalent
circuit consisting of an independent current
source in parallel with a resistor without
affecting the operation of the rest of the
circuit.
Norton equivalent circuit
a
a
network of sources and resistors
vL
iL
RL
b
18I-V Characteristic of Norton Equivalent
- The I-V characteristic for the parallel
combination of elements is obtained by adding
their currents
For a given voltage vab, the current i is equal
to the sum of the currents in each of the two
branches
i
i
a
i -IN Gv
vab
v
iN
RN
b
I-V characteristic of resistor iGv
I-V characteristic of current source i -IN
19Finding IN and RN RTh
Analogous to calculation of Thevenin Eq. Ckt 1)
Find o.c voltage and s.c. current
IN isc VTh/RTh
2) Or, find s.c. current and Norton (Thev)
resistance
20Finding IN and RN
- We can derive the Norton equivalent circuit from
a Thévenin equivalent circuit simply by making a
source transformation
RTh
a
a
vL
vL
iL
iL
iN
vTh
RL
RN
RL
b
b
21Maximum Power Transfer Theorem
Thévenin equivalent circuit
Power absorbed by load resistor
RTh
vL
iL
VTh
RL
To find the value of RL for which p is maximum,
set to 0
- A resistive load receives maximum power from a
circuit if the - load resistance equals the Thévenin resistance of
the circuit.