Title: NETWORKS 1: 09092010203
1 CHAPTER 1
- NETWORKS 1 0909201-02/03
- 23 OCTOBER 2002
- ROWAN UNIVERSITY
- College of Engineering
- Professor Peter Mark Jansson, PP PE
- DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL COMPUTER ENGINEERING
- Autumn Semester 2002 Quarter Two
2Welcome to Networks I
- Learning Objectives
- Define circuit elements
- Analyze electrical circuits
- Apply circuit parameters (v, i, r, p, etc.)
- Analyze DC circuits with passive elements
including resistance, energy storage (C,L) - Build/Model circuits using Mentorgraphics,
Pspice, IMITS and MatLab
3Learning Aids Overview
- Lectures Rowan Auditorium
- Laboratories Rowan Hall Room 204/6
- Two Lab Sections M12.30-3.15, M3.30-6.15
- Syllabus / Text (read ahead ch. 1/2)
- Computer Tools
- Website
- Email
4Learning Aids
- Required Text
- Introduction to Electric Circuits
- 5th Edition
- Dorf and Svoboda
- Website
- httpwww.engineering.rowan.edu/jansson/
- Check your Email regularly (daily)
5 Cruise course website
- Website
- httpwww.engineering.rowan.edu/jansson/
6Learning Evaluation
- Grades
- Tests (3 _at_ 20),
- Assignments (40)
- LECTURE
- In-Class, HW and Participation (20)
- LABS
- Reports, HW, etc. (20)
7Section 1 PC/Laptop Reqmts
- Windows 9x, NT, 2000, Me or XP
- Pentium 233 MHz or faster
- 16 Mb RAM
- 255 Mb free disk space (required)
- 12X CD-ROM drive or better
- 16-bit Sound card or better
- 2 Mb Video card or better
8chapter 1 overview
- history of electricity
- electric circuits and current flow
- systems of units
- voltage
- power and energy
- voltmeters and ammeters
- circuit analysis and design
9Imagine a World with..
- No internet
- No cell phones
- No computers
- No television or video games
- No mass communication (radio, telephone)
- No tall buildings
10Imagine a World with..
- No electricity
- No electronic devices
- No medical technology
- No appliances
- Refrigerators
- Microwaves
- Water heaters
- Air conditioning
- No traffic controls
11That world would be
- Primitive
- Difficult to survive in
- A very hard life
12Electrical Engineers Transformed Society
- Long, long ago in countries far, far away the
journey began.. - 2367 BC Hoang-Ti in China
- 1110 BC Tchi-nan designed
- 600 BC Etruscans control lightning
- 250 BC Flying Cupid in Dianas temple
- 658 AD Japans first magnetic cars
13Electrical Science Emerges
- 600 AD Attractive power of E-S materials
- 1551 Electricity and Magnetism defined
- 1672 Pointed Conductors
- 1720 Greys Planetarium
- 1746 Atmospheric Electricity discovered
- 1814 Electrical Spectrum detailed
- 1821 First Electric Motor
14Electric Technology
- 1825 First Electromagnet
- 1832 First E-M Induction Generator
- 1837 Telegraph
- 1879 First DC Power System
- 1888 First AC Generator
- 1895 X-rays Discovered
- 1901 Radio
15Quotable Quotes
- Everything that can be invented has been invented
- Charles H. Duell - US Patent Office 1899
- Heavier than air flying machines are impossible
- Lord Kelvin Royal Society 1895
- There is no likelihood man can ever tapthe power
of the atom - Robert Milliken Nobel Laureate Physics 1923
16Discovery continues
- AC Electric Grids 1900s
- Flourescent Lighting 1930s
- Computing 1930s
- Television 1940s
- Personal Computing 1970s
- Internet 1990
- 21st Century ?
17electric circuits current flow
- An electric circuit is an interconnection of
circuit elements linked together to form a closed
path so that electric current may flow
continuously
i1
Resistor
Battery
Where is ground?
18electric circuits current flow
- Current is the time rate of flow of electric
charge (q) past a given point - Use lower case to indicate a time varying current
and upper case to indicate a constant or direct
current
19units
- Systeme International dUnites
- Base Units (m, kg, s, A, K, mol, cd)
- Derived Units (J, W, C, V, O, S, F, Wb, H)
- See text page 13
- What are base units for Energy (J) and Power (W)
20voltage
- The voltage across an element is the work
(energy) required to move a unit positive charge
from the - terminal to the terminal.
21power
- Power is the time rate of expending energy.
- Power absorbed by an element is positive, Power
delivered by an element is negative.
22passive sign convention (psc)
- Positive current flows from positive voltage to
negative voltage.
Is the current in this resistor positive or
negative?
Is the current in this element positive or
negative?
23power and psc
- p v i
- Power is absorbed by an element adhering to the
passive sign convention (sink) - Power is supplied by an element not adhering to
the passive sign convention (source)
24power and energy
- p v i
- power voltage current
- energy power time
25electric circuits current flow
- Current is the time rate of flow of electric
charge (q) past a given point - Use lower case to indicate a time varying current
and upper case to indicate a constant or direct
current
26voltage
- The voltage across an element is the work
(energy) required to move a unit positive charge
from the - terminal to the terminal.
27voltage / current analogy
- mechanical system analogy
- pump, fluid pressure (head), velocity
- battery, voltage, current
- high pressure (head) ? high voltage
- increased fluid flow ? high current
- increasing either increases power
28 circuit analogy
- envision a closed system of water flowing in
troughs - pumps elevate the head of the flow and increase
its velocity in various troughs - flow of mass is conserved
- energy can be added (pumps) or extracted
(waterwheels) though overall system of water flow
is conserved - energy is transferred by head and velocity
- in a given part of circuit flowrate is constant
29power
- Power is the rate of expending energy.
- Power absorbed by an element is positive, Power
delivered by an element is negative.
30passive sign convention (psc)
- positive current flows from positive voltage to
negative voltage.
Is the current in this resistor positive or
negative?
Is the current in this element positive or
negative?
31power and psc
- p v i
- Power is absorbed by an element adhering to the
passive sign convention (sink) - Power is supplied by an element not adhering to
the passive sign convention (source)
32power and psc example
- what is the power absorbed or supplied by the
element below, when i 4A? - power 12V x 4A 48 W
- does not adhere to passive sign convention,
- so power is supplied.
33power and psc quiz
- what is the power absorbed or supplied by the
element below, when i 4A? - power 12V x 4A 48 W
- does not adhere to passive sign convention,
- so power is supplied.
34power and energy
- p v i
- power voltage current
- power is the time rate of expending energy
- energy power time
- energy is the capacity to do work
35 power and energy
- energy force x distance
- power energy / time period (secs)
36 power and energy example
- a mass of 300 grams experiences a force of 200
newtons. Find the energy (or work expended) if
the mass moves 15 cm. Also find the power if the
move is completed in 10 milliseconds. - energy force x distance (N m)
- energy 200 x .15 30J
- power energy / second (J/secWatts)
- power 30J/10-2 sec 3000W 3kW
37 power and energy quiz
- a Motorola StarTAC cellular phone uses a small
3.6V lithium ion battery with nominal stored
energy of 200 joules. For how long will it power
the phone if it draws a 3-mA current when in
operation?
38 quiz solution
- 200 joules 200 watt-secs
- 3.6 V x 3 mA 1.08 x 10-2 watts
- 200 watt-secs / 1.08 x 10-2 watts
- 18,519 seconds
- 18,519 seconds / 3600 sec/hr
- 5.1 hours
39 voltmeters and ammeters
- dc current and voltage measurements are made
with (analog or digital type) ammeters and
voltmeters - voltage measurements are made with red probe ()
at point a, and black probe (-) at point b
40 voltmeters and ammeters
- current measurements require breaking into the
circuit so the ammeter is in series with the
current flow - made with red probe () at point b, and black
probe (-) at point c
41 ideal meters
- ammeters negligible voltage drop through it
- voltmeters negligible current flows into it
42 circuit analysis and design
- analysis concerned with the methodological
study of a circuit to determine direction and
magnitude of one or more circuit variables (V, A)
- problem statement
- situation and assumptions
- goal and requirements
- plan ? act ? verify ? if correct, solved
- if not, plan ? act ? verify ? iterate as needed
43WHAT DO YOU KNOW (or, whats going to be on the
test)?
44Homework for next week
- See website
- show all work for any credit
- Dorf Svoboda, pp. 24-27 Problems 1.3-1,
1.3-2, 1.3-6, 1.3-7, 1.6-3, 1.6-5, - 1.6-10, 1.6-12, 1.6-14, 1.6-19 Verification
Problem 1-1 Design Problem 1-2