+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

Date post: 31-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: tashya-stevenson
View: 48 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2). Prof. Phillips January 24, 2003. Resistors. A resistor is a circuit element that dissipates electrical energy (usually as heat) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
23
lecture2 1 Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2) Prof. Phillips January 24, 2003
Transcript
Page 1: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 1

Ohm's Law (2.1)Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

Prof. Phillips

January 24, 2003

Page 2: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 2

Resistors

• A resistor is a circuit element that dissipates electrical energy (usually as heat)

• Real-world devices that are modeled by resistors: incandescent light bulbs, heating elements (stoves, heaters, etc.), long wires

• Resistance is measured in Ohms ()

Page 3: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 3

Ohm’s Law• v(t) = i(t) R - or - V = I R

• p(t) = i(t)v(t) = i2(t) R = v2(t)/R

• Always dissipating or absorbing power (p>0)

The Rest of

the Circuit

R v(t)

i(t)+

Page 4: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 4

Example: a 25W Bulb

• If the voltage across a 25W bulb is 120V, what is its resistance?

R = V2/P = (120V)2/25W = 576 • What is the current flowing through the

25W bulb?

I = V/R = 120V/576 = 0.208 A = 208 mA

Page 5: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 5

Thought Question

• When I measured the resistance of a 25W bulb, I got a value of about 40. What’s wrong here?

• Answer: The resistance of a wire increases as the temperature increases. For tungsten, the temperature coefficient of resistivity is 4.5x10-3/oK. A light bulb operates at about 5000oF.

Page 6: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 6

Open Circuit

• What if R=?

• i(t) = v(t)/R = 0

The Rest of

the Circuit

v(t)

i(t)=0+

Page 7: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 7

Short Circuit

• What if R=0?

• v(t) = i(t) R = 0

The Rest of

the Circuit

v(t)=0

i(t)+

Page 8: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 8

Class Example

Page 9: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 9

Kirchhoff’s Laws

• Kirchhoff’s Current Law (KCL)

– sum of all currents entering a node is zero

– sum of currents entering node is equal to sum of currents leaving node

• Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law (KVL)

– sum of voltage (drops) around any loop in a circuit is zero

Page 10: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 10

KCL (Kirchhoff’s Current Law)

The sum of currents entering the node is zero:

Analogy: mass flow at pipe junction

i1(t)

i2(t) i4(t)

i5(t)

i3(t)

n

jj ti

1

0)(

Page 11: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 11

Class Examples

Page 12: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 12

KVL (Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law)

• The sum of voltages around a loop is zero:

• Analogy: pressure drop thru pipe loop

0)(1

n

jj tv

v1(t)

+ +–

v2(t)v3(t)

+–

Page 13: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 13

KVL Polarity

• A loop is any closed path through a circuit in which no node is encountered more than once

• Voltage Polarity Convention– A voltage encountered + to - is positive– A voltage encountered - to + is negative

Page 14: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 14

Class Examples

Page 15: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 15

Electrical Analogies (Physical)

Electrical Hydraulic

Junction/Node Law

KCL: Σ I = 0 Σ G = 0

Loop Law KVL: Σ V = 0 Σ Δp = 0

Page 16: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 16

EE Subdisciplines

• Communication/Signal Processing

• Controls

• Electronic Circuits

• Electromagnetics

• Power

• Solid State

Page 17: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 17

Power

• Generation of electrical energy

• Storage of electrical energy

• Distribution of electrical energy

• Rotating machinery-generators, motors

Page 18: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 18

Electromagnetics

• Propagation of electromagnetic energy

• Antennas

• Very high frequency signals

• Fiber optics

Page 19: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 19

Communications/Signal Proc.

• Transmission of information electrically and optically

• Modification of signals

– enhancement

– compression

– noise reduction

– filtering

Page 20: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 20

Controls

• Changing system inputs to obtain desired outputs

• Feedback

• Stability

Page 21: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 21

Solid State

• Devices

– Transistors

– Diodes (LEDs, Laser diodes)

– Photodetectors

• Miniaturization of electrical devices

• Integration of many devices on a single chip

Page 22: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 22

Digital

• Digital (ones and zeros) signals and hardware

• Computer architectures

• Embedded computer systems

– Microprocessors

– Microcontrollers

– DSP chips

Page 23: Ohm's Law (2.1) Kirchhoff's Laws (2.2)

lecture2 23

Personal Systems Scaling


Recommended