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Circuit Laws,

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Title: No Slide Title Author: U95-2 Last modified by: UCSC Created Date: 7/10/2001 10:28:53 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Circuit Laws,


1
Lecture 3 Circuit Laws, Voltage Current Dividers
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KIRCHHOFFS CURRENT LAW
  • The net current entering a node is zero.
  • Alternatively, the sum of the currents entering a
    node equals the sum of the currents leaving a
    node.

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KIRCHHOFFS VOLTAGE LAW
  • The algebraic sum of the voltages equals zero
    for any closed path (loop) in an electrical
    circuit.

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Using KVL, KCL, and Ohms Law to Solve a Circuit
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Chapter 2 Resistive Circuits
  • Solve circuits (i.e., find currents and voltages
    of interest) by combining resistances in series
    and parallel.
  • 2. Apply the voltage-division and
    current-division principles.
  • 3. Solve circuits by the node-voltage technique.

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4. Solve circuits by the mesh-current
technique. 5. Find Thévenin and Norton
equivalents and apply source transformations. 6.
Apply the superposition principle. 7. Draw the
circuit diagram and state the principles of
operation for the Wheatstone bridge.
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1?
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1.5?
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Circuit Analysis using Series/Parallel Equivalents
  1. Begin by locating a combination of resistances
    that are in series or parallel. Often the place
    to start is farthest from the source.
  2. Redraw the circuit with the equivalent resistance
    for the combination found in step 1.

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  • 3. Repeat steps 1 and 2 until the circuit is
    reduced as far as possible. Often (but not
    always) we end up with a single source and a
    single resistance.
  • 4. Solve for the currents and voltages in the
    final equivalent circuit.

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Voltage Division
Of the total voltage, the fraction that appears
across a given resistance in a series circuit is
the ratio of the given resistance to the total
series resistance.
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Application of the Voltage-Division Principle
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Current Division
For two resistances in parallel, the fraction of
the total current flowing in a resistance is the
ratio of the other resistance to the sum of the
two resistances.
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Find i3
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Find i1
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Application of the Current-Division Principle
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Use the voltage division principle to find the
unknown voltages
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Use the current division principle to find the
currents
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Resistor Cube
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