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Final Exam Review Dr. Holbert April 28, 2008 LectRF EEE 202 1 Don’t Forget the Essentials • • • • Verify voltage polarity and current direction Obey the passive sign convention The Fundamentals: Ohm’s Law; KCL; KVL Series/Parallel Impedance combinations Z series Z1 Z 2 Z N Z j 1 1 1 1 1 Z par Z1 Z 2 ZM Zi LectRF EEE 202 2 Circuit Analysis Techniques • All these circuit analysis techniques have wide applicability: DC, AC, and Transient • Voltage and Current Division • Nodal and Loop/Mesh Analyses • Source Transformation • Superposition • Thevenin’s and Norton’s Theorems LectRF EEE 202 3 AC Steady-State Analysis • AC steady-state analysis using phasors allows us to express the relationship between current and voltage using an Ohm’s law-like formula: V=IZ • A phasor is a complex number that represents the magnitude and phase of a sinusoidal voltage or current x(t) = XM cos(ωt+θ) ↔ X = XM θ Time domain LectRF Frequency Domain EEE 202 4 Impedance Summary Element Resistor Impedance ZR = R = R 0 Inductor ZL = sL = jωL = ωL 90 Capacitor ZC = 1/(sC) = 1/(jωC) = –1/(ωC) 90 • Z is called impedance (units of ohms, Ω) • Impedance is (often) a complex number, but is not technically a phasor • Impedance depends on frequency, ω LectRF EEE 202 5 Complex Numbers Polar: z q = A = x + jy : Rectangular • • • • imaginary axis y real axis q z x2 y2 x y z sin q LectRF x is the real part y is the imaginary part z is the magnitude q is the phase angle x z cosq EEE 202 q tan 1 y x 6 Transfer Function • Recall that the transfer function, H(s), is Y ( s) Output H ( s) X( s ) Input • The transfer function in a block diagram form is X(j) ejt = X(s) est Y(j) ejt = Y(s) est H(j) = H(s) • The transfer function can be separated into magnitude and phase angle information (s=jω) H(j) = |H(j)| H(j) LectRF EEE 202 7 Bode Plots • Place system function in standard form – The terms should appear as: (1 + s) • Magnitude and phase behavior of terms – Constant gain term (K): • with poles/zeros at the origin: find ω0dB • without poles/zeros at origin: use 20 log10(K) dB – Poles and zeros of the form (1 + j) • Sketching the magnitude and phase plots • Reverse: Bode plot to transfer function LectRF EEE 202 8 Bode Plot Sketch Summary Gain ωp 0 dB –20 dB ω Phase One Decade 0° Plot Gain (magnitude) Pole (–) or Zero (+) Rolloff at ωbreak=1/; slope of ±20 dB/decade Phase Asymptotic shift of ±90° with ±45°/dec slope and ±45° cross-over at ωbreak –45° –90° ω Pole at ωbreak=1/ LectRF EEE 202 9 Low Pass Gain Gain Bode Plots of Common Filters Frequency High Pass Frequency Gain Gain Band Pass Frequency LectRF Band Reject Frequency EEE 202 10 Some Terminology & Quantities Our vocabulary has expanded further with several new terms, including: • Resonant frequency • Quality factor (Q) • Decibels (dB) and decade • Active vs. passive filter LectRF • • • • Phase shift lead/lag RMS current/voltage Bandwidth Break freq., corner freq., cutoff freq., halfpower frequency • Notch filter • Butterworth filter • FFT EEE 202 11 Course Summary • Bottom line for the semester—can you perform a comprehensive analysis of a given electrical network by determining (as appropriate): – – – – the dc and/or ac output of the circuit the system response to a step or impulse input the network transfer function(s) the system characteristics such as the poles and zeros, and the type of damping exhibited – the frequency response by sketching a Bode plot (magnitude and phase) of the system function – the type of filtering the circuit performs, if any LectRF EEE 202 12