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Chapter 06 Parallel Circuits Source: C-C Tsai Circuit Analysis: Theory and Practice Delmar Cengage Learning Parallel Circuits House circuits contain parallel circuits The parallel circuit will continue to operate even though one component may be open Only the open or defective component will no longer continue to operate C-C Tsai 2 1 Parallel Circuits Elements in parallel When they have exactly two nodes in common Elements between nodes Any device like resistors, light bulbs, etc. Elements connected in parallel, Same voltage across them 3 C-C Tsai Series-Parallel Circuits Circuits may contain a combination of series and parallel components Being able to recognize the various connections in a network is an important step in analyzing these circuits C-C Tsai 4 2 Parallel Circuits To analyze a particular circuit First identify the node Next, label the nodes with a letter or number Then, identify types of connections 5 C-C Tsai Kirchhoff’s Current Law (KCL) The algebraic sum of the currents entering and leaving a node is equal to zero I 0 Currents entering the node are taken to be positive, leaving are taken to be negative Sum of currents entering a node is equal to the sum of currents leaving the node I in I out An analogy: C-C Tsai When water flows in a pipe, the amount of water entering a point is the amount leaving that point 6 3 Example of KCL I I in out I1 + I5 = 5A + 3A = I2 + I3 + I4 = 2A + 4A + 2A 7 C-C Tsai Example of KCL I I in C-C Tsai 3mA+6mA+1mA = 4mA+4mA+2mA out 8 4 Direction of Current If unsure of the direction of current through an element, assume a direction Base further calculations on this assumption, if this assumption is incorrect, calculations will show that the current has a negative sign Negative sign simply indicates that the current flows in the opposite direction 9 C-C Tsai Example of KCL Determine I3 and I5 C-C Tsai 10 5 Example of KCL Determine I1, I3, and I4 11 C-C Tsai Example of KCL Determine unknown currents C-C Tsai 12 6 Example of KCL Determine unknown currents 13 C-C Tsai Resistors in Parallel Voltage across all parallel elements in a circuit will be the same For a circuit with 3 resistors: IT = I1 + I2 + I3 E E E E RT R1 R2 R3 1 1 1 1 RT R1 R2 R3 C-C Tsai GT G1 G 2 G 3 14 7 Example: Resistors in Parallel RT = 4 // 1 = 1 / (1/4 + 1/1) = 4/5 or GT = 1/4 + 1/1 = 5/4, RT = 1/GT = 4/5 Total resistance of resistors in parallel will always be less than resistance of smallest resistor C-C Tsai 15 Example: Resistors in Parallel Determine RT and GT C-C Tsai 16 8 Example: Resistors in Parallel Determine RT and GT 17 C-C Tsai Equal Resistors in Parallel For n equal resistors in parallel, each resistor has the same conductance G Total resistance of equal resistors in parallel is equal to the resistor value divided by the number of resistors GT = nG RT = 1/GT = 1/nG = R/n C-C Tsai 18 9 Two Resistors in Parallel For only two resistors connected in parallel, the equivalent resistance may be found by the product of the two values divided by the sum Often referred to as “product over the sum” formula RT C-C Tsai R1R 2 R1 R 2 19 Example: Two Resistors in Parallel C-C Tsai 20 10 Three Resistors in Parallel Rather than memorize this long expression Use basic equation for resistors in parallel RT R1R 2 R3 R1R 2 R1R3 R 2 R3 21 C-C Tsai Voltage Sources in Parallel When two equal sources are connected in parallel. Each source supplies half the required current Voltage sources with different potentials should never be connected in parallel, otherwise large currents can occur and cause damage C-C Tsai 22 11 Example: Voltage Sources in Parallel Determine the current I 23 C-C Tsai Current Divider Rule Allows us to determine how the current flowing into a node is split between the various parallel resistors. Larger resistor smaller current C-C Tsai 24 12 Current Divider Rule For only two resistors in parallel: RT R1R 2 R1 R 2 I1 I T RT R1 I1 R2 IT R1 R 2 25 C-C Tsai Current Divider Rule If current enters a parallel network with a number of equal resistors, current will split equally between resistors In a parallel network, the smallest value resistor will have the largest current, the largest resistor will have the least current Most of the current will follow the path of least resistance C-C Tsai 26 13 Example: Current Divider Rule RT = 1 / (1/1 + 1/2 + 1/4) = 4/7 I1 = RT / R1 * I = 4/7 / 1 * 14 = 8A 27 C-C Tsai Example: Current Divider Rule Determine unknown currents C-C Tsai 28 14 Examples: Current Divider Rule Determine unknown currents 29 C-C Tsai Examples: Current Divider Rule Determine unknown currents C-C Tsai 30 15 Analysis of Parallel Circuits Voltage across all branches is the same as the source voltage Determine current through each branch using Ohm’s Law Find the total current using Kirchhoff’s Current Law 31 C-C Tsai Example: Analysis of Parallel Circuits To calculate the power dissipated by each resistor, use either VI, I 2R, or V 2/R Total power consumed is the sum of the individual powers Compare with IT2RT Verify that power dissipated is equal to power delivered C-C Tsai 32 16 Example: Analysis of Parallel Circuits Verify that power dissipated is equal to power delivered 33 C-C Tsai Ammeter Design Coil of the meter can only handle a small amount of current A voltmeter Meter movement in series with a current-limiting resistance (Rm) A shunt resistor (Rshunt) in parallel allows most of current to bypass the coil C-C Tsai 34 17 Voltmeter Loading Effects If resistance is large compared with the resistance across which the voltage is to be measured, the voltmeter will have a very small loading effect Rm > R2 If this resistance is more than 10 times the resistance across which the voltage is being measured, the loading effect can generally be ignored. Rm > 10 R2 Rm 35 C-C Tsai Example: Voltmeter Loading Effects Case1: Rm >>R Actual value = 10V Reading value =10V * 200K/(200K+0.1K) = 9.995V Loading effect = (10-9.995) / 10 = 0.05% C-C Tsai 36 18 Example: Voltmeter Loading Effects Case2: Rm < R Actual value = 10V Reading value =10V*200K/(200K+1000K) = 1.667V Loading effect = (10-1.667) / 10 = 83.33% 37 C-C Tsai Circuit Analysis using Multisim C-C Tsai 38 19 Kernel abilities 1. What is total resistance Rt of resistors R1~Rn in parallel? Please give an example. 2. What is KCL? Please give an example. 3. What is current divider? Please give an example. 4. What is loading effect of measuring voltage? Please give an example. 39 C-C Tsai Problem 7: R3 = ? C-C Tsai 40 20 Problem 27: Determine unknown currents 41 C-C Tsai Problem 45: C-C Tsai Determine the loading effect 42 21