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CHAPTERS 2 & 3 NETWORKS 1: 0909201-01 17 September 2002 – Lecture 2b ROWAN UNIVERSITY College of Engineering Professor Peter Mark Jansson, PP PE DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING Autumn Semester 2002 networks I Announcements – Homework 1 answers posted today Returned next Monday Homework 2 is posted on web First Test is in 1 week Ch. 3: 24 Sep Lab 1 assignment is due in 1 week Sec 1: 23 Sep Sec 2: 24 Sep networks I Today’s Learning Objectives – Define open and short circuit elements Analyze independent electrical sources Analyze dependent sources VCVS, VCCS, CCVS, CCCS Analyze DC circuits with passive and active elements including: resistance and power sources Introduce Kirchhoff’s Laws chapter 2 - overview engineering and linear models - done active and passive circuit elements -done resistors – Ohm’s Law - done independent sources dependent sources transducers switches open & short circuits Open - a break in the circuit where no current flows. Short - a connector between two elements with no voltage drop. open i(t) = 0 v(t) 0 (if there is a source in the circuit) short v(t) = 0 i(t) 0 (if there is a source in the circuit) sources A “thing” that can supply energy. The energy can come in the form of: current voltage power? There are two types of sources: Independent - constant no matter what you hook it to. Dependent - the value is tied to some other point in the circuit. ideal independent sources Ideal independent sources maintain their assigned value indefinitely. i(t) An ideal voltage + v(t) source will maintain – its voltage value and Voltage source + v(t) – An ideal current i(t) source will maintain its current value and sustain ANY value of sustain ANY value of current. voltage. Current source sources / series connections series – elements connected in series have the same current running through them 10 + _ V= 5v + _ + i 20 _ sources / parallel connections parallel – elements connected in parallel have the same voltage i1 i2 i3 + I R1 R2 R3 v _ ideal dependent sources Voltage and current sources can be controlled by either a voltage or a current somewhere else in the circuit. voltage sources + – current sources vd = r ic id = g vc or or vd = b vc id = d ic r, b, g and d are the gains of these sources the key dependent sources CCVS: VCVS: VCCS: CCCS: current-controlled voltage source voltage-controlled voltage source voltage-controlled current source current-controlled current source examples CCCS: exercise 2.8-1 VCCS: exercise 2.8-2 CCVS: exercise 2.8-3 a very important example c b c ic ic + b vbe + – vbe – ic = rp gmvbe e e transducers devices that convert physical quantities into electrical quantities: pressure temperature position - potentiometer switches Make before break SPST SPDT SPDT ch. 1 & 2 important concepts Circuits; current; voltage; power Passive sign convention Active and Passive elements Linearity - superposition + homogeneity Resistors and Ohm’s Law Sources - Ideal, independent and dependent Opens and Shorts Switches WHAT DO YOU KNOW (or, what’s going to be on the test)? Homework for next Monday 9.23 show all work for any credit Dorf & Svoboda, pp. 58-63 Problems 2.3-1, 2.3-2, 2.3-6, 2.4-1, 2.5-1, 2.5-3, 2.5-5, 2.5-7, 2.6-1, 2.6-2, 2.7-1 Verification Problem 2-2 Design Problem 2-1 chapter 3 - overview electric circuit applications define: node, closed path, loop Kirchoff’s Current Law Kirchoff’s Voltage Law a voltage divider circuit parallel resistors and current division series V-sources / parallel I-sources resistive circuit analysis electric circuit applications electric telegraph transatlantic cable engineers vs. scientists those who can do, those who can’t teach? resistive circuits we are ready to make working circuits with resistive elements and both independent and dependent sources. words we know: short, open, resistor new words: node closed path loop more definitions node: a junction where two or more are connected closed path: a traversal through a series of nodes ending at the starting node loop: an illustration R1 NODE V + – PATH OR LOOP R2 ARE THESE TWO NODES OR ONE NODE? Gustav Robert Kirchhoff 1824-1887 two laws in 1847 how old was he? Kirchhoff’s laws Kirchhoff’s Current Law (KCL): at any instant is zero. Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law (KVL): The algebraic sum of the voltages around any closed path in a circuit is zero for all time. KCL R1=10 Node 1 Node 2 + _ + + _ _ I=5A R3= 5 R2= 20 Node 3 Assume passive sign convention Node 1 I=5A R1=10 i1 + v1=50v _ Node 2 + + I v2=20v R2= 20 Node 1 +I - i1 = 0 Node 2 +i1 - i2 - i3 = 0 Node 3 +i2 + i3 - I = 0 i2 = v2/R2 i3 = v3/R3 i2 _ R3= 5 v3=20v _ i3 Node 3 Use KCL and Ohm’s Law KVL R1=10 _ + + V= 5v + _ Start +V - vR1 - vR2 = 0 iV = iR1 = iR2 = i +V = iR1 + iR2 V = i(R1 + R2) LOOP 1 R2= 20 _ i = V/(R1 + R2) vR! = iR1 = VR1 /(R1 + R2) vR2 = iR2 = VR2/(R1 + R2) SERIES RESISTORS R =10 1 _ + + V= 5v + _ Start LOOP 1 R2= 20 _ NOTE +V - vR1 - vR2 = 0 i = V/(R1 + R2) iV = iR1 = iR2 = i vR! = iR1 = VR1 /(R1 + R2) +V = iR1 + iR2 vR2 = iR2 = VR2/(R1 + R2) V = i(R1 + R2) VOLTAGE DIVIDER SERIES RESISTORS resistors attached in a “string” can be added together to get an equivalent resistance. R = 2 R = 3 R = 9 R = 4 One Minute Paper please complete handout no names leave in box on leaving thanks