BASIC ELECTRICAL AND
ELECTRONICS
ENGINEERING
DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONICSENGINEERING
UNIT –
I
DC CIRCUITS
□ charge is conserved: it is neither created
nor destroyed
□ symbol: Q or q; units are coulomb (C)
□ the smallest charge, the electronic charge, is
carried by an electron (−1.602×10-19 C) or a proton
(+1.602×10-19 C)
□ in most circuits, the charges in motion are
electrons
Current is the rate of charge flow:
1 ampere = 1 coulomb/second (or 1 A = 1
C/s)
□ Current (designated by I or i) is the rate of flow
of charge
□ Current must be designated with both a direction and
a magnitude
□ These two currents are the same:
When 1 J of work is required
to move 1 C of charge from
A to B, there is a voltage of 1
volt between A and B.
Voltage (V or v) across
an element requires both
a magnitude and a
polarity.
Example: (a)=(b), (c)=(d)
The power required to push a
current i (C/s) into a voltage
v (J/C) is p = vi ( J/s = W).
When power is positive, the
element is absorbing energy.
When power is negative, the
element is supplying energy.
How much power is absorbed by the three elements above?
Pa = + 6 W, Pb = +6 W, Pc = -20 W.
(Note: (c) is actually supplying power)
□
A circuit element usually has
two terminals (sometimes three
or more).
□
The relationship between the
voltage v across the terminals
and the current i through the
device defines the circuit
element model.
□ An ideal voltage source is a circuit element that will
maintain the specified voltage vs across its
terminals.
□ The current will be determined by other
circuit elements.
□ An ideal current source is a circuit element that
maintains the specified current flow is through its
terminals.
□ The voltage is determined by other circuit
elements.
•A voltage source is an idealization (no limit on current)
and generalization (voltage can be time-varying) of a
battery.
•A battery supplies a constant ―dc‖ voltage V but in
practice a battery has a maximum power.
Dependent current sources (a) and (b) maintain a current
specified by another circuit variable.
Dependent voltage sources (c) and (d) maintain a
voltage
specified by another circuit variable.
Find the voltage vL in the circuit
below.
□ A (linear) resistor is an element for
which
□ v=iR
□ where the constant R is a resistance.
□ The equation is known as ―Ohm’s
Law.‖
□ The unit of resistance is ohm (Ω).
(a) typical resistors (b) power
resistor
(c) a 10 TΩ resistor (d) circuit
symbol
For a resistor, the plot of current
versusvoltage is a straight line:
In this example, the
slope is 4 A / 8 V or
0.5 Ω-1.
This is the graph for a
2 ohm resistor.
Resistors absorb power: since
v=iR
p=vi = v2/R = i2R
Positive power means the device is
absorbingenergy. Power is always
positive for a resistor!
A 560 Ω resistor is connected to a circuit which
causesa current of 42.4 mA to flow through it.
Calculate the voltage across the resistor and the power
it is dissipating.
v = iR = (0.0424)(560) = 23.7 V
p = i 2R = (0.0424)2(560) = 1.007 W
The resistance of a wire is determined by theresistivity
of the conductor as well as the geometry:
R=ρl/
A
[In most cases, the resistance of wires can be assumed to be 0
ohms.]
□
We sometimes prefer to work with the reciprocal of
resistance (1/R), which is called conductance
(symbol G, unit siemens (S)).
□ A resistor R has conductance G=1/R.
□ The i-v equation (i.e. Ohm’s law) can be written as
i=Gv
□ An open circuit between A and Bmeans
i=0.
□ Voltage across an open circuit: any value.
□ An open circuit is equivalent to R = ∞ Ω.
□ A short circuit between A and B means
v=0.
□ Current through a short circuit: any value.
□ A short circuit is equivalent to R = 0 Ω.
□ Fundamental elements
□ Resistor
□ Voltage Source
□ Current Source
□ Air
□ Wire
□ Kirchhoff’s Voltage and Current Laws
□ Resistors in Series
□ Voltage Division
□ Voltage is the difference in electric potential between two
points. To express this difference, we label a
avoltage
―+‖ and ―-‖ :
with b
a
Here, V1 is the potential at ―a‖ 1.5V
minus the potential at ―b‖, which is + V1 -
-1.5 V. is the flow of positive charge. Current has a
□ Current
value and a direction, expressed by an arrow:
Here, i1 is the current that flowsright;
i1 is negative if current actually flowsleft. i1
□ These are ways to place a frame of reference in your
analysis.
□ Resistor
Current is proportional to voltage (linear)
□ Ideal Voltage Source
Voltage is a given quantity, current is unknown
□ Wire (Short Circuit)
Voltage is zero, current is unknown
□ Ideal Current Source
Current is a given quantity, voltage is unknown
□ Air (Open Circuit)
Current is zero, voltage is unknown
□ The resistor has a current- i
voltage relationship +
called Ohm’s law:
v=iR
where R is the resistance in
R v
Ω,
i is the current in A, and v is the
voltage in V, with
reference directions as pictured.
□ If R is given, once you know i, it is easy to find v and
vice- versa.
□Since
R is never negative, a resistor always absorbs
power…
□ The ideal voltage source
Vs
explicitly defines the voltage between
its terminals.
Constant (DC) voltage source: Vs = 5 V
Time-Varying voltage source: Vs = 10 sin(t) V
Examples: batteries, wall outlet, function generator, …
□
The ideal voltage source does not provide any
information about the current flowing through it.
□
The current through the voltage source is defined by the
rest of the circuit to which the source is attached. Current
cannot be determined by the value of the voltage.
□ Do not assume that the current is zero.
□ Wire has a very small resistance.
□
For simplicity, we will idealize wire in the following
way: the potential at all points on a piece of wire is
the same, regardless of the current going through it.
Wire is a 0 V voltage source
Wire is a 0 Ω resistor
□ This idealization (and others) can lead to
contradictions on paper—and smoke in lab.
□ The ideal current source sets the
value of the current running through Is
it.
Constant (DC) current
I =2A
source: s
Time-Varying current source: Is = -3 sin(t) A
Examples: few in real life!
□ The ideal current source has known current, but
unknown voltage.
□
The voltage across the voltage source is defined by the
rest of the circuit to which the source is attached.
□ Voltage cannot be determined by the value of the current.
□ Do not assume that the voltage is zero!
□ Many of us at one time, after walking on a carpet in winter,
have touched a piece of metal and seen a blue arc of light.
□ That arc is current going through the air. So is a bolt
of lightning during a thunderstorm.
□ However, these events are unusual. Air is usually a
good insulator and does not allow current to flow.
□ For simplicity, we will idealize air in the following
way: current never flows through air (or a hole in a
circuit), regardless of the potential difference
(voltage) present.
Air is a 0 Acurrent source
Air is a very very big (infinite) resistor
□There can be nonzero voltage over air or a hole in a
circuit
i i i
v v v
Resistor: Line Ideal Voltage Ideal Current
through origin with Source: Source:
slope 1/R Vertical line Horizontal line
Wire: Vertical Air Horizontal line
line : through origin
through
□
The I-V relationship for a device tells us how
current and voltage are related within that
device.
□ Kirchhoff’s laws tell us how voltages relate to other
voltages in a circuit, and how currents relate to other
currents in a circuit.
□ KVL: The sum of voltage drops around a
closedpath must equal zero.
□ KCL: The sum of currents leaving a closed surface
or point must equal zero.
□ Suppose I add up the potential drops b
a + -
Vab
around the closed path, from ―a‖ to +
―b‖ to ―c‖ and back to ―a‖.
Vbc
□
Since I end where I began, the total -
dropmust
path in potential
be zero:I encounter
Vab + Vbc +along
Vca = c
□ the
0 It would not make sense to say, for example, ―b‖ is 1 V
lower than ―a‖, ―c‖ is 2 V lower than ―b‖, and ―a‖ is 3 V
lower than ―c‖. I would then be saying that ―a‖ is 6
V lower than ―a‖, which is nonsense!
□
We can use potential rises throughout instead of
potential drops; this is an alternative statement of
KVL.
□A voltage rise is a negative voltage drop.
Path +
Along a path, I might encounter a voltage
which is labeled as a voltage drop (in the V
direction I’m going). The sum of -
Path 1
these voltage drops must equal zero. +
I might encounter a voltage which is labeled
as a voltage rise (in the direction I’m going). V-2
This rise can be viewed as a ―negative
drop‖. Rewrite:
□ Look at the first sign you encounter on
each element when tracing the closed path. Path +
If it is a ―-‖ , it is a voltage rise and you
will insert a ―-‖ to rewrite as a drop. -V2
-
a b c
What does + v2 v3
KVL say about 1 2
the voltages + + +
va vb vc
along these 3 -
paths?
3
Path
1:
va v2 vb
Path 0
2:
Path vb v3 v3
vcv c
3:
0 0
□ KVL tells us that any set of elements whichare
connected at both ends carry the same voltage.
□ We say these elements are in parallel.
KVL
clockwise,
start at top:
Vb – Va = 0
Va =
Vb
□ Electrons don’t just disappear or get trapped
(inour analysis).
□ Therefore, the sum of all current entering a closed
surface or point must equal zero—whatever goes in
must come out.
□ Remember that current leaving a closed surface can
be interpreted as a negative current entering:
i1 is the same -i1
statement
as
In order to satisfy KCL, what is the value of i?
KCL says:
24 μA + -10 μA + (-)-4 μA + -i
=0
24 -4
18 μA – i =
A A
0
i = 18 10 i
μA A
□ Suppose two elements are connected with nothing coming
off in between.
□ KCL says that the elements carry the same current.
□ We say these elements are in series.
i1 – i2 = i1 = i2
0
□ Consider resistors in series. This means they are
attached end-to-end, with nothing coming off in
between.
i
R1 R2 R3
+ i R1 - + i R2 - + i R3 -
+
VTOTAL -
□ Each resistor has the same current (labeled i).
□ Each resistor has voltage iR, given by Ohm’s law.
□ The total voltage drop across all 3 resistors is
VTOTAL = i R1 + i R2 + i R3 = i (R1 + R2 + R3)
i
R1 R2 R3
+ v -
□ When we look at all three resistors together as one
unit, we see that they have the same I-V relationship
as one resistor, whose value is the sum of the
resistances:
□ So we
just onecan treat these
equivalent resistors as
resistance, as
long as we are not interested in the i
individual voltages. Their effect
on the rest of the circuit is the R1 + R2 + R3
same, whether lumped together or + v -
not.
□ If we know the total voltage over a series of resistors, we
can easily find the individual voltages over the
individual resistors.
R1 R2 R3
+ i R1 - i R3
+ + i R2 - +
VTOTAL - -
□ Since the resistors in series have the same current, the
voltage divides up among the resistors in proportion
to each individual resistance.
□ For example, weknow
i = R2 +
VTOTAL / (R1 +
so
R3) the voltage over the first resistor
is
i R1 = (R1 + R2 + R3)
R1 VTOTAL /
R1
VTOTAL
□ To find the
R1 voltage
R2 R3 over an
individual resistance in series, take the
total series voltage and multiply by the
individual resistance over the total
resistance.