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Lecture # 1 Chapter 1 Principles of Electric Circuit 207 MDE 2010/2011 - 1431/1432 Winter semester 311 Tarek Elsarnagawy Prof. assc. Dr. Ing. Tel.: 4735277 – 497 or 516 Office hours: Email: [email protected] http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/elsarnagawy/default.aspx Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. © WS 2010 Chapter 1 Textbook Principles of Electric Circuits: Conventional • Current Version, 9/E Thomas L. Floyd • ISBN-10: 013507309X ISBN-13: 9780135073094 • Publisher: Prentice Hall Copyright: 2010 Format: Cloth; 992 pp Published: 03/05/2009 Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. © WS 2010 Chapter 1 Evaluation and assessment • • • • • • Assignments Seminars/oral Quizzes Mid term Practical/lab Final Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. 5% 5% 5% 15% 30% 40% © WS 2010 Chapter 1 Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. © WS 2010 Chapter 1 Passive & Active components Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. © WS 2010 6 Chapter 1 Passive Components Welcome to the Principles of Electric Circuits. You will study important ideas that are used in electronics. You may already be familiar with a few of the important parts used in electronic circuits. Resistors are introduced in Chapter 2. Color bands •Resistors Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 Resistance material (carbon composition) Insulation coating Leads © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 7 Chapter 1 Passive Components Capacitors will be introduced in Chapter 12. •Capacitors Foil Mica Foil Mica Foil Mica Foil Mica capacitor_ Tantalum electrolytic capacitor (polarized) Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 8 Chapter 1 Passive Components Inductors will be introduced in Chapter 13. •Inductors Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 9 Chapter 1 Passive Components Transformers will be introduced in Chapter 14. •Transformers Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 10 Chapter 1 Active Components Passive components are used in conjunction with active components to form an electronic system. Active components will be the subject of future courses. •Transistors •Integrated Circuits Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy Chapter 1 Quantities and Units 11 Principles of Electric Circuits, Conventional Flow, 9th ed. © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 12 Chapter 1 International System of Units “System International d’Unites” SI Fundamental Units Quantity Length Mass Time Electric current Temperature Unit Meter Kilogram Second Ampere Kelvin Candela Luminous intensity Amount of substance Mole Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 Symbol m kg s A K cd mol © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 13 Chapter 1 Some Important Electrical Units Except for current, all electrical and magnetic units are derived from the fundamental units. Current is a fundamental unit. Quantity Current Charge Voltage Resistance Power Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 Unit Ampere Coulomb Volt Ohm Watt Symbol A C V W W © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 14 Chapter 1 Some Important Magnetic Units All magnetic units are derived from the fundamental units. These units are discussed in Chapter 10. Quantity Symbol Unit Magnetic field intensity Magnetic flux Magnetic flux density Magnetomotive force H f B Fm Permeability Reluctance m Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 R Ampere-turns/meter Weber Tesla Ampere-turn Webers/ampere-turns-meter Ampere-turns/weber Symbol At/m Wb T At Wb/At.m At/Wb © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 15 Chapter 1 Scientific and Engineering Notation Very large and very small numbers are represented with scientific and engineering notation. 47,000,000 = 4.7 x 107 (Scientific Notation) = 47. x 106 (Engineering Notation) Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 16 Chapter 1 Scientific and Engineering Notation 0.000 027 = 2.7 x 10-5 (Scientific Notation) = 27 x 10-6 (Engineering Notation) 0.605 = 6.05 x 10-1 (Scientific Notation) = 605 x 10-3 (Engineering Notation) Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 17 Chapter 1 Engineering Metric Prefixes Can you name the prefixes and their meaning? Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 P peta 1015 T tera 1012 G giga 109 M mega 106 k kilo 103 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 18 Chapter 1 Engineering Metric Prefixes Can you name the prefixes and their meaning? Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 m milli 10-3 m micro 10-6 n nano 10-9 p pico 10-12 f femto 10-15 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 19 Chapter 1 Metric Conversions When converting from a larger unit to a smaller unit, move the decimal point to the right. Remember, a smaller unit means the number must be larger. Smaller unit 0.47 MW = 470 kW Larger number Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 20 Chapter 1 Metric Conversions When converting from a smaller unit to a larger unit, move the decimal point to the left. Remember, a larger unit means the number must be smaller. Larger unit 10,000 pF = 0.01 mF Smaller number Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 21 Chapter 1 Metric Arithmetic When adding or subtracting numbers with a metric prefix, convert them to the same prefix first. 10,000 W + 22 kW = 10,000 W + 22,000 W = 32,000 W Alternatively, 10 kW + 22 kW = 32 kW Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 22 Chapter 1 Metric Arithmetic When adding or subtracting numbers with a metric prefix, convert them to the same prefix first. 200 mA + 1.0 mA = 200 mA + 1,000 mA = 12,000 mA Alternatively, 0.200 mA + 1.0 mA = 1.2 mA Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 23 Chapter 1 Significant Figures Most work in electronics involves measurements, which always have error. You should report only digits that are reasonably assumed to be accurate. The rules for determining if a reported digit is significant are 1. Nonzero digits are always considered to be significant. 2. Zeros to the left of the first nonzero digit are never significant. 3. Zeros between nonzero digits are always significant. 4. Zeros to the right of the decimal point for a decimal number are significant. 5. Zeros to the left of the decimal point with a whole number may or may not be significant depending on the measurement. Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 24 Chapter 1 Significant Figures 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 Looking at the rule, decide how many significant figures in each of the examples, which are given with a rule: Nonzero digits are always considered to be significant. 152.71 Zeros to the left of the first nonzero digit are never significant. 0.0938 Zeros between nonzero digits are always significant. 10.05 Zeros to the right of the decimal point for a decimal number are significant. 5.100 Zeros to the left of the decimal point with a whole number may or may not be significant depending on the measurement. 5100. © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 25 Chapter 1 Quiz 1. A resistor is an example of a. a passive component b. an active component c. an electrical circuit d. all of the above Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 26 Chapter 1 Quiz 2. The electrical unit that is fundamental is the a. volt b. ohm c. coulomb d. ampere Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 27 Chapter 1 Quiz 3. In scientific notation, the number 0.000 56 is written a. 5.6 x 104 b. 5.6 x 10-4 c. 56 x 10-5 d. 560 x 10-6 Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 28 Chapter 1 Quiz 4. In engineering notation, the number 0.000 56 is written a. 5.6 x 104 b. 5.6 x 10-4 c. 56 x 10-5 d. 560 x 10-6 Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 29 Chapter 1 Quiz 5. The metric prefix nano means a. 10-3 b. 10-6 c. 10-9 d. 10-12 Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 30 Chapter 1 Quiz 6. The metric prefix pico means a. 10-3 b. 10-6 c. 10-9 d. 10-12 Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 31 Chapter 1 Quiz 7. The number 2700 MW can be written a. 2.7 TW b. 2.7 GW c. 2.7 kW d. 2.7 mW Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 32 Chapter 1 Quiz 8. The value 68 kW is equal to a. 6.8 x 104 W b. 68, 000 W c. 0.068 MW d. All of the above Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 33 Chapter 1 Quiz 9. The sum of 330 mW + 1.5 W is a. 331.5 mW b. 3.35 W c. 1.533 W d. 1.83 W Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 34 Chapter 1 Quiz 10. The quantity 200 mV is the same as a. 0.000 200 V b. 20 mV c. 0.2 V d. all of the above Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy 35 Chapter 1 Quiz Answers: Principles of Electric Circuits MDE 207 1. a 6. d 2. d 7. b 3. b 8. d 4. d 9. d 5. c 10. a © WS 2010 -Elsarnagawy