Title: DC Circuits Lab
1DC Circuits Lab
2Outline
- Basic Components of a Circuit
- Series Circuit
- Parallel Circuit
- Ohms Law
- Lab Overview
3Basic Circuit Components
We represent real electrical components with
symbols
A Battery
can be represented with this symbol
called a DC voltage source
- A DC Voltage Source
- Provides Power for our circuit
- Battery or Lab power supply is an example
- DC voltage is supplied across the two terminals
- Its voltage is VOLTS (V)
4Basic Circuit Components
We represent real electrical components with
symbols
can be represented with this symbol
called a resistor
5Basic Circuit Components
We represent real electrical components with
symbols
The Earth
can be represented with this symbol
called the ground symbol
6Building a Circuit
- We wish to power our flashlights light bulb
- We need to attach the light bulb to the battery
- We use wires to connect the light bulb to the
battery
Insteadlet's represent the real components with
their symbols
7Building a Circuit
creating a schematic
- Replace the battery with a DC Voltage Source
symbol
- Replace the light bulb with a Resistor symbol
.5 O
- Mark the symbols values (V, R, etc.)
Since this node is at GND (OV) this node
must be 1.5Volts higher
0V
Insteadlet's represent the real components with
their symbols
8Analyzing the Circuitusing Ohms Law
- When we attach the resistor to the DC voltage
source, current begins to flow
- How much current will flow?
.5 O
- Ohms Law (VIR)
- -gtDescribes the relationship between the voltage
(V), current (I), and resistance (R) in a circuit
- Using Ohms Law, we can determine how much
current is flowing through our circuit
0V
9Analyzing the Circuitusing Ohms Law
- How much current will flow?
- Use Ohms Law
- V I x R
- 1.5V I x .5 O
- Solve for I
- I 1.5V / .5 O 3 Amps
.5 O
0V
So, 3 Amps will flow through the .5 Ohm resistor,
when 1.5 Volts are across it
10Resistors in Series
- Resistors connected by only 1 terminal,
back-to-back, are considered to be in series
R1 .5 O
- We can replace the two series resistors with 1
single resistor, we call Req - The value of Req is the SUM of R1 R2
- ReqR1R2.5 O .5 O 1O
R2 .5 O
Req 1 O
0V
11Resistors in Series
- Now we can find the current through the circuit
using Ohms Law
- Use Ohms Law
- V I x Req
- 1.5V I x 1 O
- Solve for I
- I 1.5V / 1 O 1.5 Amps
Req 1 O
0V
The bigger the resistance in the circuit, the
harder it is for current to flow
12Resistors in Series
- Back to our original series circuit, with R1 and
R2
- The current is the SAME through each resistor
R1 .5 O
- Current flows like water through the circuit,
notice how the 1.5 Amp stream of current flows
through both resistors equally
R2 .5 O
- Ohms Law shows us voltage across each resistor
- V(R1) 1.5Amps x .5 O .75V
- V(R2) 1.5Amps x .5 O .75V
0V
13Resistors in Parallel
- Resistors connected at 2 terminals, sharing the
same node on each side, are considered to be in
parallel
- Unlike before, we cannot just add them. We must
add their inverses to find Req
R1 .5 O
R2 .5 O
0V
14Resistors in Parallel
- This is the equivalent circuit
- Use Ohms Law, we find the current through Req
- V I x Req
- 1.5V I x .25 O
- Solve for I
- I 1.5V / .25 O 6 Amps
Req .25 O
0V
The small the resistance in the circuit, the
easier it is for current to flow
15Resistors in Parallel
- Back to our original series circuit, with R1 and
R2
- The current is NOT the SAME through all parts of
the circuit
- Current flows like water through the circuit,
notice how the 6 Amp stream of current splits
to flow into the two resistors
R1 .5 O
R2 .5 O
- The Voltage across each resistor is equal when
they are in parallel
0V
16Resistors in Parallel
- The voltage is 1.5 V across each resistor
- Ohms Law tells us the current through each
- I(R1) V / R 1.5V / .5 O 3A
- I(R2) V / R 1.5V / .5 O 3A
- The 6Amps of current has split down the two legs
of our circuit - It split equally between the two legs, because
the resistors have the same value
R1 .5 O
R2 .5 O
0V
The current will split differently if the
resistors are not equal
17In Summary
- Ohms Law VIR
- Describes the relationship between the voltage
(V), current (I), and resistance (R) in a circuit - Current is equal through two resistors in series
- Voltage drops across each resistor
- Req R1 R2 . . .
- Voltage is equal across two resistors in parallel
- Current splits through branches of parallel
circuits - 1/Req 1/R1 1/R2
18In Lab Today
- You will build series circuits
- Build parallel circuits
- Work with a breadboard
- Verify Ohms Law by measuring voltage using a
multimeter - And yes, there is HW!