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Sinusoidal Steady-state Analysis Complex number reviews Phasors and ordinary differential equations Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Concepts of impedance and admittance Sinusoidal steady-state analysis of simple circuits Resonance circuit Power in sinusoidal steady –state Impedance and frequency normalization Complex number reviews Complex number z x jy , j 1 Re( z) x Im( z) y Magnitude Phase or angle In polar form z | z | e or j z | z | | z | ( x y ) 2 2 1/ 2 tan 1 x | z | cos y | z | sin z y x The complex number can be of voltage, current, power, impedance etc.. in any circuit with sinusoid excitation. Operations: Add, subtract, multiply, divide, power, root, conjugate Phasors and ordinary differential equations A sinusoid of angular frequency is in the form Am cos( t ) Theorem The algebraic sum of sinusoids of the same frequency and of their derivatives is also a sinusoid of the same frequency Example 1 d 2sin 2t dt 2 cos 2t cos 60 2sin 2t sin 60 4sin 2t 4 cos 2t f (t ) 2 cos(2t 60) 4sin 2t cos 2t 3 sin 2t 4sin 2t 4 cos 2t 5cos 2t (4 3)sin 2t 7.6 cos(2t 48.8) Phasors and ordinary differential equations Re( Am e jt ) Re( Am e j (t ) ) Re( Am cos(t ) jAm sin(t )) Am cos(t ) x(t ) A phasor Ame j Example 2 v(t ) 110 2 cos(2 60t / 3) A 110 2 e j /3 v(t ) Re(110 2 e j (120 t ) ) phasor form Phasors and ordinary differential equations Ordinary linear differential equation with sinusoid excitation a0 dnx dt n a1 d n 1 x dt n 1 .. an x Am cos(t )........(1) Lemma: Re[.. ] is additive and homogenous Re[ z1 (t ) z 2 (t )] Re[ z1 (t )] Re[ z 2 (t )] Re[1 z1 (t ) 2 z2 (t )] 1 Re[ z1 (t )] 2 Re[ z2 (t )] d d jt jt Re( Ae ) Re Ae Re( j Ae jt ) dt dt Phasors and ordinary differential equations Application of the phasor to differential equation A Let substitute 0 dn dt n dn dt n Ame j , X X me j x(t ) Re( Xe jt ) in (1) yields Re( Xe jt ) .. n Re( Xe jt ) Re( Ae jt ) Re( 0 Xe jt ) .. Re( n Xe jt ) Re( Ae jt ) Re(0 ( j)n Xe jt ) .. Re(n Xe jt ) Re( Ae jt ) Phasors and ordinary differential equations Re [0 ( j )n 1 ( j )n 1 .. n 1 ( j ) n ] Xe jt Re( Ae jt ) [ 0 ( j ) n 1 ( j ) n 1 .. n 1 ( j ) n ] X A X A [ 0 ( j ) n 1 ( j ) n 1 .. n 1 ( j ) n ] Xm Am [( n n 2 ..) ( n 1 n 3 ..) ] 2 2 3 even power n 1 n 3 .. tan n n 2 2 .. 1 3 2 1 2 odd power Phasors and ordinary differential equations Example 3 From the circuit in fig1 let the input be a sinusoidal voltage source and the output is the voltage across the capacitor. es (t ) Re(Ee jt ) | E | cos(t ) L R + Fig1 es (t ) + - es (t ) | E | cos(t ) Vc (t ) C i(t) - vc (t ) | Vc | cos(t ) Phasors and ordinary differential equations KVL d L i (t ) Ri (t ) vc (t ) es (t ) dt 2 LC d vc (t ) dt 2 dvc (t ) RC vc (t ) es (t ) dt Particular solution vc (t ) Re(Vc e jt ) | Vc | cos(t ) [ LC)( j)2 RC( j) 1]Vc E (2) Phasors and ordinary differential equations Vc E 1 LC j RC |E| | Vc | [(1 2 LC )2 ( RC )2 ]1/ 2 1 RC tan 1 2 LC 2 Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Complete reponse y(t ) yh (t ) y p (t ) y p (t ) yh (t ) yh (t ) = sinusoid of the same input frequency (forced component) =solution of homogeneous equation (natural component) n ki esit (for distinct frequencies) i 1 Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Example 4 For the circuit of fig 1, the sinusoid input es (t ) cos 2t u (t ) is applied to the circuit at time t 0 . Determine the complete response of the Capacitor voltage. C=1Farad, L=1/2 Henry, R=3/2 ohms. iL (0) I 0 2, vc (0) 1 From example 3 1 d 2 vc (t ) 3 dvc (t ) vc (t ) cos 2t u (t ) 2 2 dt 2 dt Initial conditions dv ( 0 ) i ( 0 ) vc (0 ) 1, c L 2 dt C Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Characteristic equation 2 3 s 2 s 1 0, s 1,2 2 vh (t ) k1e t k2e 2t 1 Natural component Forced component v p (t ) Re(Ve j 2t ) | V | cos(2t ) es (t ) Re( Ee j 2t ) cos 2t 3 ( j) 1]V E ( j ) 2 2 E 1 j108.4 V 0.316 e 1 12 2 j 32 1 j3 From (2) [1 2 Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response The complete solution is vc (t ) vh (t ) v p (t ) t k1e k2 e 2t 0.316 cos(2t 108.4 ) vc (0) 1 k1 k2 0.316cos(108.4 ) k1 k2 1.1 d vc (0) 2 k1 2k2 0.316 2sin(108.4 ) dt k1 2k2 1.4 k1 3.6 k2 2.5 Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response The complete solution is vc (t ) 3.6et 2.5e2t 0.316cos(2t 108.4 ) Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Sinusoidal steady-state response In a linear time invariant circuit driven by a sinusoid source, the response y (t ) Is of the form y(t ) k1e k2e s1t s2t .. kn e snt Am cos(t ) Irrespective of initial conditions ,if the natural frequencies lie in the left-half complex plane, the natural components converge to zero as t and the response becomes close to a sinusoid. The sinusoid steady state response can be calculated by the phasor method. Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Example 5 Let the characteristic polynomial of a differential a differential equation Be of the form (s 2 0 2 ) 2 s 4 20 2 s 2 0 4 The characteristic roots are s1 s2 j0 , s3 s4 j0 and the solution is of the form yh (t ) (k1 k2t )e j0t (k3 k4t )e j0t In term of cosine yh (t ) k1 cos(0t 1 ) k2t cos(0t 2 ) The solution becomes unstable as t Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Example 6 Let the characteristic polynomial of a differential a differential equation Be of the form s 2 02 The characteristic roots are s1 j0 , s2 j0 and the solution is of the form y(t ) yh (t ) y p (t ) yh (t ) k1e j0t k2e j0t K cos(0t ) and y p (t ) B cos( t ) The solution is oscillatory at different frequencies. If unstable as t y(t ) At cos(t ) 0 the output is Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Superposition in the steady state If a linear time-invariant circuit is driven by two or more sinusoidal sources the output response is the sum of the output from each source. Example 7 The circuit of fig1 is applied with two sinusoidal voltage sources and the output is the voltage across the capacitor. L A2m cos(2t 2 ) + A1m cos(1t 1 ) + - i(t) R + C - Vc (t ) Phasors and ordinary differential equations KVL d L i (t ) Ri (t ) vc (t ) e1s (t ) e2 s (t ) dt LC d 2 vc (t ) dt 2 dvc (t ) RC vc (t ) A1m cos( 1t 1 ) A2m cos( 2 t 2 ) dt Differential equation for each source LC LC d 2 v p1 (t ) dt 2 d 2 v p 2 (t ) dt 2 RC RC dv p1 (t ) dt dv p 2 (t ) dt v p1 (t ) A1m cos( 1t 1 ) v p 2 (t ) A2 m cos( 2 t 2 ) Phasors and ordinary differential equations The particular solution is v p (t ) v p1 (t ) v p 2 (t ) V1m cos(1t 1 1 ) V2 m cos( 2t 2 2 ) where V1m e j (1 1 ) V2 m e j (2 2 ) A1m e j1 1 12 LC j1 RC A2 m e j2 1 2 LC j2 RC 2 Complete response and sinusoidal steady-state response Summary A linear time-invariant circuit whose natural frequencies are all within the open left-half of the complex frequency plane has a sinusoid steady state response when driven by a sinusoid input. If the circuit has Imaginary natural frequencies that are simple and if these are different from the angular frequency of the input sinusoid, the steady-state response also exists. The sinusoidal steady state response has the same frequency as the input and can be obtained most efficiently by the phasor method Concepts of impedance and admittance Properties of impedances and admittances play important roles in circuit analyses with sinusoid excitation. Phasor relation for circuit elements Linear time-invariant circuit in sinusoid steady state + v(t ) Re(Ve jt ) i (t ) Re( Ie jt ) Element - v(t ) Re(Ve jt ) | V | cos(t V ) i(t ) Re( Ie jt ) | I | cos(t I ) Fig 2 Concepts of impedance and admittance Resistor v(t ) Ri (t ), i (t ) Gv(t ) V RI , I GV I V The voltage and current phasors are in phase. Capacitor dv iC dt I jCV , 1 V I jC V I 90 , I V 90 , The current phasor leads the voltage phasor by 90 degrees. Concepts of impedance and admittance Inductor di vL dt V j L I , V I I 90 , 1 j L V I V 90 , The current phasor lags the voltage phasor by 90 degrees. Concepts of impedance and admittance Definition of impedance and admittance The driving point impedance of the one port at the angular frequency is the ratio of the output voltage phasor V to the input current phasor I | Z ( j ) | or |V | , |I| Z ( j ) V I v(t ) | Z ( j) || I s | cos(t Z The driving point admittance of the one port Is ) at the angular frequency is the ratio of the output current phasor I to the input voltage phasor V |I| | Y ( j ) | , Y ( j ) I V |V | or i(t ) | Y ( j) || Vs | cos(t Y V ) Concepts of impedance and admittance | Z ( j ) | 1 , | Y ( j | Angular frequency Resistor Capacitor Inductor Z ( j ) Y ( j ) Z Y R 1 G R 1 jC jC j L 1 j L Sinusoidal steady-state analysis of simple circuits In the sinusoid steady state Kirchhoff’s equations can be written directly in terms o voltage phasors and current phasors. For example: v1 (t ) v2 (t ) v3 (t ) 0 If each voltage is sinusoid of the same frequency V 1mcos(t 1 ) V 2mcos(t 2 ) V 3mcos(t 3 ) 0 Re(V 1 e jt ) Re(V 2 e jt ) Re(V 3 e jt ) 0 Re(V 1 e jt V 2 e jt V 3 e jt ) 0 Re[(V 1 V 2 V 3 )e jt ] 0 V 1 V 2 V 3 0 Sinusoidal steady-state analysis of simple circuits Series parallel connections I1 I 2 .... I n I In a series sinusoid circuit V V1 V2 ....Vn I + V1 - Z1 + V2 - I1 Z2 + I2 + Vn - Zn In Fig 3 V - Z ( j ) n Z ( j ) i i 1 Sinusoidal steady-state analysis of simple circuits In a parallel sinusoid circuit V1 V2 .... Vn v I I1 I 2 ....I n I + Fig 4 V I1 + Y1 V 1 - - Y ( j ) n Y ( j ) i i 1 I2 + Y2 V 2 - In + Yn Vn - Sinusoidal steady-state analysis of simple circuits Node and mesh analyses Node and mesh analysis can be used in a linear time-invariant circuit to determine the sinusoid steady state response. KCL, KVL and the concepts of impedance and admittance are also important for the analyses. Example 8 i ( t ) 10 cos( 2 t 30 ) In figure 5 the input is a current source s Determine the sinusoid steady-state voltage at node 3 2F 1 1W 2 + is 1W v1 - iC 1W 3 Fig 5 + 2H iL v2 - + 2W v3 - Node and mesh analyses is (t ) 10 cos(2t 30 ) Re( I s e j 2t ) or I s 10e j 30 v1 (t ) Re(V1e j 2t ), v2 (t ) Re(V2e j 2t ), v3 (t ) Re(V3e j 2t ) 1 1 I L YLV2 V2 V2 jL j4 IC YC (V1 V3 ) jC (V1 V3 )V2 j 4(V1 V3 ) KCL at node 1 V1 j 4(V1 V3 ) (V1 V2 ) I s KCL at node 2 V2 (V2 V1 ) (V2 V3 ) 0 j 4 KCL at node 3 V3 j 4(V3 V1 ) (V3 V2 ) 0 2 Node and mesh analyses Rearrange the equations (2 j 4)V1 V2 j 4V3 I s 1 )V2 V3 0 j4 3 j 4V1 V2 ( j 4)V3 0 2 V1 (2 By Crammer’s Rule 2 j4 1 V3 j4 2 j4 1 j4 1 1 2 j4 1 1 1 2 j4 1 Is 0 0 j4 1 3 2 j4 2 j8 Is 6 j11.25 Node and mesh analyses Since I s 10e j 30 V3 6.45e j 44 Then and the sinusoid steady-state voltage at node 3 is v3 (t ) 6.45cos(2t 44 ) Example 9 Solve example 8 using mesh analysis 2F i2 Fig 6 1W 1W + 1W vs + - i1 2H vL i3 - + 2W v3 - Node and mesh analyses vs (t ) 10 cos(2t 30 ) Re(Vs e j 2t ) or Vs 10e j 30 i1 (t ) Re( I1e j 2t ), i2 (t ) Re(I 2e j 2t ), i3 (t ) Re(I3e j 2t ) VL Z LiL j LI L j 4(I1 I 2 ) 1 VC ZC I 3 I3 jC KVL at mesh 1 I1 ( I1 I 2 ) j 4( I1 I3 ) Vs KVL at mesh 2 1 I 2 ( I 2 I3 ) j 4( I3 I1 ) 0 j4 KVL at mesh 3 2I3 ( I3 I 2 ) j 4( I3 I1 ) 0 Node and mesh analyses Rearrange the equations (2 j 4) I1 I 2 j 4I3 Vs 1 ) I 2 I3 0 j4 j 4I1 I 2 (3 j 4) I3 0 I1 (2 By Crammer’s Rule 2 j4 1 I3 j4 2 j4 1 j4 1 Vs 1 2 0 j4 1 0 1 1 2 j4 1 2 j8 Vs 12 j 22.5 j4 1 3 j4 Node and mesh analyses Since Then Vs 10e j 30 and V3 2 I 3 V3 6.45e j 44 and the sinusoid steady-state voltage at node 3 is v3 (t ) 6.45cos(2t 44 ) The solution is exactly the same as from the node analysis Resonance circuit Resonance circuits form the basics in electronics and communications. It is useful for sinusoidal steady-state analysis in complex circuits. Impedance, Admittance, Phasors Figure 7 show a simple parallel resonant circuit driven by a sinusoid source. IC is (t ) Re( I s e jt ) IR IL G=1/R C L Fig 7 is (t ) Re(I s e + V - jt Y ) | I s | cos(t I s ) Resonance circuit The input admittance at the angular frequency Y ( j ) G jC is 1 j L 1 G j (C ) L The real part of Y ( j ) is constant but the imaginary part varies with frequency 1 B ( j ) C L 1 At the frequency f0 0 0 2 2 2 LC the susceptance is zero. The frequency f0 is called the resonant frequency. Resonance circuit The admittance of the parallel circuit in Fig 7 is frequency dependant Re[Y ( j )] G Im[ Y ( j )] C 1 L Re[ Z ( j )] G Im[ Z ( j )] G 2 B 2 ( ) B( ) G 2 B 2 ( ) 1 1 Z ( j ) Y ( j ) G jB( ) G B( ) 2 j 2 2 G B ( ) G B 2 ( ) B C 0 1 L Susceptance plot Fig 8 Resonance circuit 1 Y ( j ) G j (C ) L 1 Z ( j ) 1 G j (C ) L Im( Z ) Im (Y ) Admittance Plane 0 |Y | Y G 0 Locus of Y Re(Y ) 0 0 Re( Z ) 1 2G Fig 9 Locus of Z 1 G Resonance circuit The currents in each element are I R GV , I L and 1 jL I R I L IC I S If for example V , I C jCV is (t ) cost Re(I s e ) R 1W, jt I s e j 0 , 1rad / s The admittance of the circuit is Y ( j1) 1 j (1 4) 1 3 j 10e j 71.6 The impedance of the circuit is 1 1 j 71.6 Z ( j1) e Y ( j1) 10 1 L H , C 1F 4 Resonance circuit The voltage phasor is 1 V Z ( j1) I s Thus IR 1 10 10 e j 71.6 e j 71.6 , I L Im 1 10 e j18.4 , IC 1 10 e j161.6 V Fig 10 IC IR IS Re IL Resonance circuit Similarly if 0 1 2 rad / s is (t ) cos 2t Re( I s e j 2t ) and LC I s e j 0 , 2 rad / s Y ( j 2) 1, Z ( j 2) 1, V 1 I R 1, I L 2e j 90 , I C 2e j 90 The voltage and current phasors are Note that it is a resonance and Im I L I s , IC I s IS IC IR Is IL V Re Fig 11 Resonance circuit The ratio of the current in the inductor or capacitor to the input current is the quality factor or Q-factor of the resonance circuit. | I L | | IC | Qp | Is | | Is | Rp L Generally Q 1 and the voltages or currents in a resonance circuit is very large! Analysis for a series R-L-C resonance is the very similar 1 Z ( j ) R j (L ) C VS VR VL VC Vs I s ( j ) Z ( j ) | VL | | VC | Qs | Vs | | Vs | L Rs Power in sinusoidal steady-state The instantaneous power enter a one port circuit p(t ) v(t )i(t ) The energy delivered to the t W (t o , t ) in the interval (to , t ) is p(t ' )dt' to i (t ) + Generator v(t ) - Fig 12 is Power in sinusoidal steady-state Instantaneous, Average and Complex power In sinusoidal steady-state the power at the port is v(t ) Vm cos(t V ) Re(Ve jt ) where V Vme j V , Vm | V | If the port current is i(t ) I m cos(t I ) Re( Ie jt ) where I I me j I , I m | I | Power in sinusoidal steady-state Then p(t ) v(t )i(t ) Vm I m cos(t V ) cos(t I ) 12 Vm I m cos( V I ) 12 Vm I m cos(2t V I ) T Pav 1 p(t ')dt ' 12 Vm I m cos( V I ) t 0 p(t ) Pav Fig 13 v(t ) i (t ) Power in sinusoidal steady-state Remarks The phase difference in power equation is the impedance angle Pav is the average power over one period and is non negative. But p(t) may be negative at some t 1 The complex power in a two-port circuit is P V I Vrms I rms P 1 2 1 2 | V || I | e 2 j( V I ) | V || I | cos( V I ) j 12 | V || I | sin( V I ) Pav Re( P) Re( 12 V I ) Re(Vrms I rms ) Pav 1 2 | I | Re[ Z ( j )] 2 2 1 2 | V | Re[Y ( j )] 2 I rms Re[ Z ( j )] Vrms Re[Y ( j )] 2 Average power is additive Power in sinusoidal steady-state Maximum power transfer The condition for maximum transfer for sinusoid steady-state is that The load impedance must be conjugately matched to the source imedance ZL ZS Pav max | Vs2 | 8Rs | Vs2 | Ps 4 Rs Q of a resonance circuit For a parallel resonance circuit Q R 0CR 0 L 0 1 2 C | V | 2 1 2 G | V | 2 Q 0 energy stored average power dissipated inthe resistor (Valid for both series and parallel resonance circuits) Impedance and frequency normalization In designing a resonance circuit to meet some specification component values are usually express in normalized form. From 0 1 R Z 0 R, 0 , 3 db bandwidth Q L LC R 1 L , C 2 and 0 Q 0 R Let the normalized component values are Then 1 R0 1, L0 Q, C0 Q R Z0 , L QZ 0 0 Z0 1 ,C Q0 Z 0 Z 002 Impedance and frequency normalization Popularity of normalized design: The circuit design can be made at any impedance level and center frequency Well-known solutions exist Let rn desired impedance level impedance level of normalized design desired typical frequency Wn typical frequency of normalized design Then rn C0 R rn R0 , L L0 , C Wn rn W n Impedance and frequency normalization Example Fig. 14 shows a low pass filter whose transfer impedance E2 I1 2 1 1 6 E2 I1 1.333H 1 + I1 1.5F 0.5F 1W E2 1 2 0 The gain of the filter is 1 at 0 And 1 / 2 at 1 Design the circuit to have an impedance of 600 ohms at and equal to 1/ 1 0 2 at 3.5 kHz then rn 600 and Wn 2 3.5 103 2.199 104 Rad/s Impedance and frequency normalization R rn R0 600 rn 600 L L0 1.333 36.37mH 4 Wn 2.199 10 C01 1.5F C1 0.1137 F 4 rn Wn 600 2.199 10 C02 0.5F C2 0.0379 F 4 rn Wn 600 2.199 10 Impedance and frequency normalization E2 I1 36.37mH + I1 0.11378F 6 00W 0.0379F E2 600 600 2 0 Designed circuit 2x3500 Rad/s