Chapter 1 - DC Circuit (Part 1)
Chapter 1 - DC Circuit (Part 1)
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Basic Electrical System
■ Electricity is a form of energy
■ Examples of energy source – hydro, coal, wind, nuclear and
solar
■ Electrical systems permits us easily to transmit energy from a
source of supply to a point of application
■ Electrical engineering is the profession concerned with
systems that produce, transmit and measure electrical signals
■ Examples of electrical systems – power system,
communication system, computer system, control system and
signal procesing system
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…Basic Electrical System
Basic electrical system;
1. The source - to provide energy for the electrical system,
eg. Battery, generator, socket outlet
2. The load - to absorb the electrical energy supplied by
the source, eg. Lamps, aircond
3. The transmission system - conducts energy from the
source to the load, eg. Insulated wire
4. The control apparatus - permits energy to flow or
interrupts the flow, eg. switch
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…Basic Electrical System
■ Example of Electrical System
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…Basic Electrical System
■ Example of Electrical System
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…Basic Electrical System
■ Example Power System
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…Basic Electrical System
■ Example Communication System
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Electrical Quantities & Units
■ Electric Charge, Q
– Charge can be in proton (positive) or electron (negative)
– Energy exists at proton and electron
– Unit: Coulomb (C)
– 1 C = electrical quantity when 1 Ampere current flows for 1 second in a
conductor
■ Current, I
– Rate of charge flows
– Two types: DC and AC
– Unit: Ampere (A)
– 1 A = transfer of 1 C charge in 1 s
– I=Q/t
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… Electrical Quantities & Units
■ Energy, W
– Capacity for doing work
– Unit: Joule (J)
■ Voltage, V or E
– Potential between 2 points in a circuit
– Unit: Volt (V)
– 1 V = Energy needed to transfer 1 C charge through an
element
– V = W/Q
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… Electrical Quantities & Units
■ Power, P
– Rate for doing work
– Unit: Joule/s or Watt (W)
– 1 W = Power used when 1 A current flowing through a potential of 1 V
– P = VI
■ Resistance, R
– All conductors have their own resistance
– To limit the flow of current in a circuit
– Unit: Ohm (W)
– 1 W = Element with resistance of 1 W will allow 1 A to pass through if 1 V
voltage is applied across the element
– If R = 0 Ω, then short circuit (large current flow)
– If R = µ , then open circuit (no current flow)
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… Electrical Quantities & Units
No Quantity Symbol Unit Formula
1 Charge Q Coulomb, C Ixt
2 Current I Ampere, A Q/t
3 Voltage V Volt, V W/Q
4 Energy W Joule, J Pxt
5 Power P Watt, W W/t
6 Resistance R Ohm, Ω V/I
7 Capacitance C Farad, F Q/V
8 Inductance L Henry, H Φ/I
9 Frequency F Hertz, Hz 1/t
10 Impedance Z Ohm, Ω V/I
11 Admittance X Ohm, Ω V/I
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Standard prefixes for the SI unit of measure
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Current, Voltage and Power Relationships
■ Voltage – normal sign
- Vba +
Iab
a b
+ Vab -
Vab = -Vba
• (Same magnitude, different direction)
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Active and Passive Element
Active Element I
- electrical element that can
supply power to other +
I
element
+
- Current direction of active
element are same with
Active V V
element
voltage direction for active
-
element
-eg. Voltage supply, current -
supply, transistor
I
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…Active and Passive Element
Passive Element I
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Basic Electrical Laws - Ohm’s Law
V
R
I
+ V -
I
(a)
(b)
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…Basic Electrical Laws – Ohm’s Law
■ V=IR
I R
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… Current, Voltage and Power Relationships
■ Voltage, V = IR Volt
■ Power, P = VI
= I2R
= V2/R
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Example 1.1
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Example 1.2
A 9V battery supplies power to a cordless curling iron with
a resistance of 18 ohms. How much current is flowing
through the curling iron?
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Example 1.3
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Example 1.4
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Example 1.6
(i) For the circuit shown,
determine current flowing and
power absorbed by the resistor I
if the resistance is 1 kΩ and +
+
voltage across it is 10 V. V R
(ii) If the current flowing Vs
through the circuit is 3A and -
power absorbed is 72 W, -
determine the resistor value
and voltage across it.
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Network Topology
Network topology refers placement of elements in the
network (circuit) and the geometric configuration of the
network
Consider the equivalent circuits drawn below
5Ω and 10V
are in series
2 Ω, 3 Ω, and 2A
are in parallel
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Basic Electrical Laws –
Kirchoff’s Current Law
■ The sum of current entering N
ån
a point is equal to the sum
of current leaving the point
(node). i = 0
■ Algebraic sum of current
entering or leaving any n =1
point is equal to zero.
■ In is the current entering Sientering = Sileaving
(+ve) or leaving (-ve) any
point
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…Basic Electrical Laws –
Kirchoff’s Current Law
I1
■ I1 - I2 - I3 + I4 - I5 + I6 = 0.
I2
I6
■ I1 + I4 + I6 = I2 + I3 + I5
I3
I5
I4
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…Basic Electrical Laws –
Kirchoff’s Current Law
Examples;
1. For the network junction shown, calculate the I1 I2
current I3 given that I1 = 3A, I2 = -4A and I4 = 2A
I1 – I2 + I3 – I4 = 0
I4
\ I3 = -I1 + I2 + I4 = -5A I3
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Example 1.9
• An R1 of 20W , an R2 of 40W and R3 of 60W are
connected in parallel across the 120V power line.
Using Kirchhoff current law, determine the total
current.
IT
120V R1 R2 R3
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Basic Electrical Laws –
Kirchoff’s Voltage Law
■ Sum of voltage applied N
is equal to the sum of
voltage loss
■ Algebraic sum of
å n
V =
n =1
0
voltage in a loop is
equal to zero.
■ Vn is the voltage drop SVsupply = SVdrop
(or supply) in a loop
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…Basic Electrical Laws –
Kirchoff’s Voltage Law
+ E2 -
+ ■ E1 - E2 = V1 + V2 + V3 + V4.
+ V1 - V2
+ -
E1
+ ■ E1 - E2 - V1 - V2 - V3 - V4 = 0.
V3
-
-
- V4 +
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Example 1.10
• For the circuit below, find voltages v1 and v2
Ans:
V1=8V
V2= -12V
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