Electrical Circuits
- An electrical component is a
- An electrical element is a
- An electrical network is an interconnection of electrical components or a model of such an interconnection, consisting of electrical elements
- An electrical circuit is a network consisting of a closed loop, giving a return path for the current.
- A branch represents a single two-terminal element (such as a voltage source or a resistor)
- A node (or junction) represents a connection between two or more branches
- Nodes that are connected by perfectly conducting wires are considered to be the same node
- A reference node
- A mesh
- A loop
- A short circuit is a circuit element with resistance approaching zero, so
- An open circuit is a circuit element with resistance approaching infinity, so
Terminology
In some texts, a node is defined to be the junction between 3 or more elements. Another term for that is an essential node In this text, a node is defined to be the junction between 2 or more elements, by thisdefinition, some nodes may be redundant (i.e. not independent)
Electrical Elements
classification of elements:
- terminals number:
- One-port elements (two terminals) - dioes, resistors, capacitors, inductors
- Two-port elements (four terminals)
- Multiport elements
- energy source:
- passive elements do not have a source of energy - dioes, resistors, capacitors, inductors
- active elements (or sources) have a source of energy - voltage sources, current sources - dependent sources
- linearity:
- linear elements have a linear relationship between voltage and current
- resistors, capacitors, inductors
- nonlinear elements are elements in which the relation between voltage and current is a nonlinear function
- dioes
- linear elements have a linear relationship between voltage and current
Kirchhoff’s Circuit Laws
- Kirchhoff’s (circuit) laws (or Kirchhoff’s rules) are two equalities that deal with the current and potential difference.
Kirchhoff’s Current Law
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aka: first law, junction rule
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For any node in an electrical circuit, the algebraic sum of the currents flowing into and out of the node is zero. Mathematically
- is the current flowing through the -th branch
- is the total number of branches with currents flowing towards or away from the node
- Currents flowing into the node are considered positive, and currents flowing out of the node are considered negative (or vice versa, depending on the convention chosen)
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This law is based on the conservation of electric charge
Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law
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aka: second law, loop rule
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The voltage drop is the decrease in electric potential along the path of a current flowing in a circuit
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In one traversal of any closed loop, the sum of the voltage rises equals the sum of the voltage drops.
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given a circuit with a voltage source and resistors :
- is the current through the circuit
- is the voltage drop across the -th resistor
- is equal to minus the voltage drop across
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This law is based on the conservation of energy
Resistance & Conductance
- the electric current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the voltage across the two points
- Ohm’s Law holds for ohmic materials (like most metals) but not for non-ohmic materials (like diodes, transistors, and other semiconductors)
- The unit of resistance is the () defined as
- The reciprocal of resistance is called the electrical conductance (in , siemens, which is )
-
- is the voltage (in )
- is the current (in )
- is the resistance (in )
- Electrical resistivity (or specific resistance) denoted by , is a measure of how strongly a material opposes the flow of electric current
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- is the resistance of the conductor (in )
- is the resistivity of the material (in )
- is the length of the conductor (in )
- is the cross-sectional area of the conductor (in )
- The reciprocal of the resistivity, called the electrical conductivity (or specific conductance) is (in , siemens per meter, or )
-
Resistor
- The resistors could be simple resistors, or they could be lightbulbs, heating elements, or other resistive devices
Series Resistors
- When resistors are connected end to end along a single path they are said to be connected in series
- is the total resistance (or equivalent resistance) of the series
- is the voltage across the -th resistor
- is the current through the circuit
- is the voltage across the voltage source, and it is equal to the sum of the voltage drops across each resistor
- Any charge that passes through will pass through and so on, hence the same current flows through each resistor in series
- When we add resistors in series:
- () The current in the circuit decreases (more resistors to pass through)
- () The total resistance increases
- The power dissipated by the -th resistor is
- When then
Parallel Resistors
- We say that resistors are connected in parallel when the current from the source splits into paths
- is the current through the -th resistor
- is the total current through the circuit
- All resistors in parallel have the same voltage drop across them
- When we add resistors in parallel:
- () The total current in the circuit increases (more paths for the current to flow)
- () The total resistance decreases
- The power dissipated by each resistor is
- When then
- The total power dissipated from the source is
EXAMPLE
A parallel circuit with two resistors of has a total resistance of , so
NOTE
The total power dissipated from a source is greater in a parallel circuit than in a series circuit with the same resistors and voltage source
Electrical Impedance
todo
Semiconductor
Capacitance
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A capacitor is a device that can store electric charge, and normally consists of two condaucting objects (usually plates or sheets) placed near each other but not touching
- The capacitor was originally known as the condenser
- is the relationship between charge, capacitance, and voltage
- is the charge stored on the capacitor (in )
- is the capacitance of the capacitor (in , farads)
- is the voltage across the capacitor (in )
- is the capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor
- is the capacitance (in )
- is the permittivity of free space (or vacuum permittivity) that is
- is the area of the plates (in )
- is the separation between the plates (in )
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The total (or equivalent) capacitance of capacitors connected:
- (series)
- (parallel)
RC Circuits
- is the voltage across the capacitor in time in an RC circuit
- is the initial voltage across the capacitor (in )
- is the voltage across the capacitor at time (in )
- is the resistance in the circuit (in )
- is the capacitance of the capacitor (in )
- is the time (in )
- is the base of the natural logarithm
- is the time constant of the circuit (in )
- is the voltage across the resistor in time in an RC circuit
- is the charge on the capacitor in time in an RC circuit
- is the initial charge on the capacitor (in )
- is the current in the circuit in time in an RC circuit
Ground
- ground fault
- ground wire
- Leakage
- ground and neutral
- Fuse
- GFCI (Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter)
- Circuit breaker
- grounding system
- grounding rod
- leakage current
- hot, neutral, and ground wires
- Grounding is the action of electrically connecting something to a Grounding Electrode, which is a conductive object used to create a direct connection to ground—typically a Ground Rod