CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Chapter 3 Mdm shahadah ahmad.

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Presentation transcript:

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Chapter 3 Mdm shahadah ahmad

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

INTRODUCTION OF NODE- VOLTAGE METHOD Use KCL. Important step: select one of the node as reference node Then define the node voltage in the circuit diagram.

Node-voltage example

In the diagram, node 3 is define as reference node and node 1 and 2 as node voltage V 1 and V 2. The node-voltage equation for node 1 is,

In the diagram, node 3 is define as reference node and node 1 and 2 as node voltage V 1 and V 2. The node-voltage equation for node 1 is,

Node-voltage equation of node 2,

Solving for V 1 and V 2 yeilds

THE NODE-VOLTAGE METHOD AND DEPENDENT SOURCES If the circuit contains dependent sources, the node-voltage equations must be supplemented with the constraint equation imposed by the presence of the dependent sources.

example… Use the node-voltage method to find the power dissipated in the 5Ω resistor.

The circuit has 3 node. Thus there must be 2 node-voltage equation. Summing the currents away from node 1 generates the equation,

Summing the current away from node 2 yields,

As written, these two equations contain three unknowns namely V 1, V 2 and i Ø. To eliminate i Ø, express the current in terms of node-voltage,

Substituting this relationship into the node 2 equation,

Solving for V 1 and V 2 gives,

Then,

SPECIAL CASE When a voltage source is the only element between two essential nodes, the node- voltage method is simplified.

Example…

There is three essential nodes, so two simultaneous equation are needed. Only one unknown node voltage, V 2 where as V 1 =100V. Therefore, only a single node- voltage equation is needed which is at node 2.

Using V 1 =100V, thus V 2 =125V.

SUPERNODE When a voltage source is between two essential nodes, those nodes can be combine to form a supernode (voltage sourse is assume as open circuit).

Supernode example…

Nodes chosen,

Node-voltage equation for node 2 and 3,

Summing both equation, Above equation can be generates directly using supernode approach

Supernod

Starting with resistor 5Ω branch and moving counterclockwise around the supernode,

Using V 1 =50V and V 3 as a function of V 2,

Substituded into the node-voltage equation,

Using V 2 value, gives

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

INTRODUCTION OF MESH- CURRENT METHOD A mesh is a loop with no loop inside it. A mesh current is the current that exist only in the perimeter of a mesh. Mesh-current method use KVL to generates equation for each mesh.

Mesh-current example…

Mesh-current circuit with mesh current i a and i b.

Use KVL on both mesh,

Solving for i a and i b, and you can compute any voltages or powers of interest.

THE MESH-CURRENT METHOD AND DEPENDENT SOURCES If the circuit contains dependent sources, the mesh-current equations must be supplemented by the appropriate constraint equations.

Example…

Use the mesh-current method to determine the power dissipated in the 4Ω resistor.

Using KVL,

But Substituting into the mesh-current equation,

Using Cramer rule, the values of i 2 and i 3 can be determine,

Power dissipated by 4Ω resistor is

SPECIAL CASE (SUPERMESH) When a branch includes a current source, the mesh-current method can be simplified. To create a supermesh, remove the current source from the circuit by simply avoiding the branch when writing the mesh- current equations.

Supermesh equation,

Mesh 2 equation,

From the circuit, i c –i a = 5A Using Cramer rule, the three mesh current can be obtain.

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

SOURCE TRANSFORMATION Source transformation allows a voltage source in series with a resistor to be replaced by a current source in parallel with the same resistor or vice versa.

Sorce transformation

Example…

Source transformation procedure From Tomethod Use,

FromTomethod Use,

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

THEVENIN EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT Thevenin equivalent circuit consist of an independent voltage source, V Th in series with a resistor R Th.

Thevenin equivalent circuit

Thevenin voltage, V Th = open circuit voltage in the original circuit. Thevenin resistance, R Th is the ratio of open-circuit voltage to the short-circuit current.

Example…

Step 1: node-voltage equation for open-circuit:

Step 2: short-circuit condition at terminal a-b

Node-voltage equation for short- circuit:

Short-circuit current: Thevenin resistance:

Thevenin equivalent circuit

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

NORTON EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT A Norton equivalent circuit consists of an independent current source in parallel with the Norton equivalent resistance. Can be derive from a Thevenin equivalent circuit simply by making a source transformation. Norton current, I N = the short-circuit current at the terminal of interest. Norton resistance, R N = Thevenin resistance, R Th

Example

Step 1: Source transformation

Step 2: Parallel sources and parallel resistors combined

Step 3: Source transformation, series resistors combined, producing the Thevenin equivalent circuit THEVENIN EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT

Step 4: Source transformation, producing the Norton equivalent circuit NORTON EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

MAXIMUM POWER TRANSFER Two basic types of system: –Emphasizes the efficiency of the power transfer –Emphasizes the amount of power transferred.

Maximum power transfer is a technique for calculating the maximum value of p that can be delivered to a load, R L. Maximum power transfer occurs when R L =R Th.

Example…

Power dissipated by resistor R L

Derivative of p with repect to R L

Derivative is zero and p is maximum when

The maximum power transfer occurs when the load resistance, R L = R Th Maximum pwer transfer delivered to R L :

CIRCUIT ANALYSIS METHODS Node-Voltage method Mesh-current method Source transformation Thevenin equivalent circuit Norton equivalent circuit Maximum power transfer Superposition principle

PRINSIP SUPERPOSISI In a circuit with multiple independent sources, superposition allows us to activate one source at a time and sum the resulting voltages and currents to determine the voltages and currents that exist when all independent sources are activate.

Step of Superposition principle 1.Deactivated all the sources and only remain one source at one time. Do circuit analysis to find voltages or currents. 2.Repeat step 1 for each independent sources. 3.Sum the resulting voltages or currents.

1.Independent voltage source will become short-circuit with 0Ω resistance. 2.Independent current source will become open-circuit. 3.Dependent sources are never deactivated when applying superposition. REMEMBER!! !

Example…

Step 1: deactivated all sources except voltage source

V 0 is calculated using voltage divider:

Step 2: Deactivated all sources except current source

V 0 is calculated by using current divider:

V 0 =2+5=7V. Step 3: Sum all the resulting voltages:

Question 1 (node- voltage) Calculate the value of I o

Solution Node 1:

Node 2:

Question 2 (mesh-current) Determine the value of currents, I 1, I 2 and I 3.

Supermesh: Mesh 3:

Dependent current source V o

Substitute V 0

Use Cramer rule

Current I 2 :

Current I 3 :

Question 3 (thevenin)

Open-circuit voltage, V oc :

Node-voltage equation for V oc

Thevenin resistance, R Th :

Thevenin equivalent circuit:

Question 4 (norton)

Open-circuit current, I sc :

Norton resistance, R N : R N = 4Ω

Norton equivalent circuit:

Question 5 (superposition) Use superposition principle to determine the voltage V o.

Deactivated current source

Deactivated voltage source

Summing the voltage V 0

Question 6 (node-voltage) Determine the value of V o.

node-voltage equation: Current i Δ :

Thus: V 0 =50V