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EENG 2610: Circuits Analysis
Class 5: Loop Analysis
Oluwayomi Adamo
Department of Electrical Engineering
College of Engineering, University of North Texas
Loop Analysis
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Loop analysis uses KVL to determine a set of loop currents.
In general, there are (B-M+1) linearly independent KVL equations.
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B: number of branches, M: number of nodes
The number of “window panes” tells us how many equations we need !
All the circuits in this course will be planar
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Planar means we can draw the circuit on a sheet of paper in such a way
that no conductor crosses another conductor.
A mesh is a special kind of loop that does not contain any loops within it.
Loop current is also called mesh current, and loop analysis is called
mesh analysis.
Write KVL Equations (or mesh equations)
Loop current: i1 ,
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i2
In loop analysis, the unknown parameters are loop currents.
The current in a branch equals to the algebraic sum of all the loop
currents passing through that branch.
Example 3.12: Find current I0
An alternative selection of loop currents
Example 3.15: Find V0
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The presence of a current source simplifies loop analysis
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Define one loop through each current source,
The remaining loop currents must pass through elements not covered by the
previous equations, and cannot pass through the current sources.
Example 3.16: Find I0
Current sources shared by meshes – The General Loop Approach
I3
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Determine how many equations we need from the number of “window panes”
Define one loop through each current source,
Additional loop currents are defined to pass through elements not covered by the
previous equations, and cannot pass through current sources.
Write KVL for meshes and general loops using loop currents that we have defined.
Example 3.20: Find V0
Circuits containing Dependent Sources
I1
I2
I3
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I4
First, we treat dependent source as though it were an independent source when
writing KVL equations.
Then we write the controlling equation for the dependent sources.
Problem Solving Strategy
for Loop Analysis
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Step 1: Define independent loops and loop current
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One loop current is assigned to each independent loop in a circuit
that contains N independent loops
Find N by counting the number of “window panes”
Step 2: If only contains voltage sources
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If only independent voltage sources are present, write N linearly
independent KVL equations, one for each loop.
If dependent voltage sources are present,
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write KVL equations as what is done for circuits with only
independent voltage sources;
Then write control equations for the dependent voltage sources
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Step 3: If current sources are present,

Use the General Loop Approach



Define one loop through each current source,
Additional loop currents are defined to pass through elements not
covered by the previous equations, and cannot pass through current
sources.
Write KVL for meshes and general loops using loop currents that we
have defined.
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