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ELEC130 Electrical Engineering 1 Gunilla Burrowes EA G24 (p) 4921 6352 email gunilla@ee Mon &Fri 2-3pm Fernando Martinez EE 102 4921 6149 fmm@ecemail Help Desk HELP - EA G08 - during office hours Material 5 modules 1 - Introductory Circuit Techniques 2 - DC Circuit Tools 3 - AC Circuit Tools 4 - Applications in Power 5 - Applications in Communications & Instrumentation Week 1 & 2 Week 2 3 & 4 Week 5 & 6 Week 7 & 8 Week 9 10 11 Week 12 & 13 Electronic Workbench: Faculty PC’s Rm. ES210 - Go to Diomedes Login: cstudentnumber Password: access keys on students card + daymonth (ddmm) of birth TopClass: http://www.newcastle.edu.au:86/topclass/ Username: first name.last name Password: date of birth ddmmyy Email: first name.last name@studentmail Lectures 2 hour / week for 13 weeks - Monday 5 -7pm Quizzes - Weeks 3 6 8 11 13 Course Information Booklet Student Responsibility Survey Student Responsibility Expect CIVIL Behavior Work consistently Progressive assessment Teaching / Learning Rote Learning Where to go for help Material may not always seem relevant Its Up To You The onus is shifted to you to “learn” (independently) Majority of learning will take place when you tackle the subject material BURY NOW the natural tendency to assume a passive role (waiting to be taught) Text & References Course information Booklet & Safety Notes $12.00 Purchase after this lecture - Foyer EA Several Alternative Texts Floyd - Principles of Electric Circuits Dorf - Introduction to Electric Circuits Hambley - Electrical Engineering Johnson - Electric Circuit Analysis Student Problem Sets - Library Text references Study Guide Tutorials 1 hours / week. Start next week Check your group on Noticeboard Foyer EA You must Enroll Tonight ASK QUESTIONS Electronic Workbench - ES 210 Introduction - Tutorial 2 Week 3 Matrix - textbook Tutorial 1 Laboratory 2 hours / week - start next week Voluntary Laboratory THIS WEEK Check your group on Noticeboard Foyer EA You Must Enroll Tonight - Foyer EA EE 103(a) 9 laboratory exercises (Lab 1 goes for 2 weeks) 2 practical tests - 15 % each (Total 30%) All experiments are considered “examinable” Keep a Laboratory diary Laboratory Attendance Sheets Safety - notes will be attached to course information booklet- READ THEM Use Common Sense Keep the Laboratory Tidy BE PREPARED Help Desk - EE 102 / EE 103 Monday 9 - 11 am Wednesday 8 - 9 am 1 - 2 pm 8 - 9 pm Assessment Final grade for ELEC 130 will be 5 quizzes @ 4% each 2 laboratory tests @ 15% June Exam @ 50% 20% 30% 50% Engineering Concerned with creation of solutions to problems, based on science and technology Systems Engineering emphasises a wholistic design methodology encompasses the whole life cycle of the product Role taken on by engineering in technology-based enterprises creative element to convert a need into a service or product integration of all processes into a single coherent process Multi-disciplinary & Integrating Nature Economics Manufacturing Social Reliability Legal Maintainability Environmental Human Engineering Engineering as a Process Market Market research Engineering Technology, R & D Marketing, sales and support Changing Nature of Engineering The essence of engineering is a product of the human mind For the mind to be creative, it must operate on concepts (not just facts) Swing back to the wholistic view complexity of the interaction with society rapid and fascinating development of engineering science Engineering Involves two complementary subjects the body of knowledge known as engineering science the process of applying that knowledge Aims of ELEC 130 To study the concepts of basic electrical elements & circuits Start with laws of physics to derive simple ‘rules’ for electrical circuits Same rules apply to ‘light’ current i.e. computers, communication ‘heavy’ current i.e. power grid, motors Overview of DC Circuits Units & Notation What is a circuit? What is Charge / Current? What is Voltage? Voltage & Current sources Power Resistance Ohm’s Law Units SI system - kg,m,s Others derived from these - Volts, Farads Scaling of Units p n m _ K M G pico nano micro milli unit kilo mega giga 10-12 10-9 10-6 10-3 1 103 106 109 Notation Time varying quantities - lower case e.g. v(t), i(t) sometimes assume time - v(t) = v Time invariant quantities - upper case e.g. V, R, Remember to include units of measure e.g. 15 Volts What is a circuit? In ELEC130 we assume that a circuit comprises of two or more elements connected by electrical conductors. Electrical conductors allow electricity to flow (unimpeded) between elements Electricity must flow in a CLOSED path or circuit Open Circuit A ‘Break’ in a circuit is called an open circuit Short Circuit A ‘bypass’ of an element is called a short circuit Different Geography Two circuits may have the same topology but different geography Charge Charge is the phenomenon giving rise to those forces observed between electrical charged bodies. There are 2 kinds of charges: pos & neg Symbol Q (constant) or q(t) (time varying) Defined in terms of the charge on 1 electron ~=1.6x10-19 Coulombs or stated as Charge on 6.2x1018 electrons is 1 Coulomb Current Motion of charge constitutes an electric current Conventional current is the flow of positive charges Electron current is negative charges Measure of rate of flow of charge 1 Ampere = 1 Coulomb/sec or Charge is the sum or ‘accumulation’ of current Symbol I i(t) Current cont.. The primary purpose of electric circuits is to move or transfer charges along specific paths circuit circuit 3A = -3A Voltage Fix one Coulomb of charge in space … energy input (work) is required to bring another Coulomb of charge from a point A to a new point B closer to the fixed charge ……. the potential energy difference between points B & A is known as voltage: 1 Volt = 1 Joule / Coulomb Charge tends to flow from a higher voltage (potential) to a lower voltage - resulting charge flow is current Symbol V v(t) Power Power is energy / time P = VI Watts p = v(t).i(t) W i.e. need voltage and current (at the same time) to do work Power can be +ve and -ve; it can be ‘absorbed’ or delivered Symbol: P p(t) Units: Watts W Power Convention If v(t) 0 and i(t) 0 then p 0 i(t) Power is said to be absorbed by the circuit NB polarity of voltage and direction of current + v(t) - Circuit or element Voltage & Current Source An ideal voltage source maintains its stated voltage regardless of the load attached Independent voltage source An ideal current source supplies its stated current regardless of the load attached independent current source VA VA VA IB IB Ohm’s Law Some materials are good conductors of electricity, some are poor In a ‘good’ conductor, the current flowing through the conductor is (approx.) proportional to the voltage across it. Constant of proportionality is known as resistance, given symbol is R Ohm’s Law: v(t) = R i(t) Example i(t) 4V 10