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EE103 - Lecture 2 - Basic Concepts of Electricity

The document is a lecture on basic concepts of electricity for an Electrical Engineering course. It covers topics like what electrical engineering is, the five main classifications of electrical engineering systems, basic concepts of electricity including electric charge, current, voltage, and units of measurement in the International System of Units. Circuit theory and its basic assumptions are also introduced.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views36 pages

EE103 - Lecture 2 - Basic Concepts of Electricity

The document is a lecture on basic concepts of electricity for an Electrical Engineering course. It covers topics like what electrical engineering is, the five main classifications of electrical engineering systems, basic concepts of electricity including electric charge, current, voltage, and units of measurement in the International System of Units. Circuit theory and its basic assumptions are also introduced.

Uploaded by

Suhaib Intezar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EE – 103:

Electrical Engineering
LECTURE 2: BASIC CONCEPTS OF ELECTRICITY
Outline:
 What is Electrical Engineering?

 SI Units

 Basic Concepts

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 2


Outline:
 What is Electrical Engineering?

 SI Units

 Basic Concepts

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 3


What is Electrical Engineering?

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 4


Electrical Engineering
 The study of systems that produce, transmit and
measure electrical signals.

 It is an engineering discipline concerned with


the study, design and application of equipment,
devices and systems which use
electricity, electronics, and electromagnetism.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 5


Electrical Engineering
 There are five main classifications of Electrical
Engineering:
1. Communication Systems:

2. Computer Systems

3. Control Systems

4. Power Systems

5. Signal-Processing Systems

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 6


Communication Systems
 Communication systems are electrical
systems that generate, transmit, and
distribute information.

 Examples include telephone systems,


television equipment, radio equipment,
satellite systems, and radar systems etc.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 7


Computer Systems
 Computer systems use electric signals to
process information ranging from word
processing to mathematical computations.

 These systems include networks of


integrated circuits—miniature assemblies of
hundreds, thousands, or millions of
electrical components that often operate at
speeds and power levels close to
fundamental physical limits.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 8


Control Systems
 Control systems use electric signals to
regulate processes.

 Examples include temperature control,


pressure control, altitude control, velocity
control, and position control etc.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 9


Power Systems
 Power systems deal with the generation and
distribution of electric power.
Electric power is usually generated in large
quantities by nuclear, hydroelectric, solar, and
thermal (coal-, oil-, or gas-fired) generators.
Power is distributed by a grid of conductors that
crisscross the country.
 A major challenge in designing and operating
such a system is to provide sufficient redundancy
and control so that failure of any piece of
equipment does not leave a city, state, or region
completely without power.
04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 10
Signal Processing Systems
 Signal-processing systems act on electric signals
that represent information. They transform the
signals and the information contained in them
into a more suitable form.
 For example, image-processing systems, radar,
laser scans, sonars, lidars, GPS, IMU etc.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 11


Can you identify the types
of electrical systems used
in an aircraft?

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 12


Outline:
 What is Electrical Engineering?

 SI Units

 Basic Concepts

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 13


International System of Units
 The metric system was originally SI Base Units
established in France in 1795. Quantity SI base Symbol
unit
 The International System of Units Length meter m
(abbreviated SI after the French name,
Mass kilogram kg
Le Système International d’Unités) is a
revised version of the metric system. Temperature kelvin K
Time second s
 The SI was adopted by international Amount of
agreement in 1960. mole mol
substance
 There are seven SI base units. Luminous
candela cd
intensity

Electric current ampere A

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 14


Units of Measurement
Prefix Symbol Meaning Factor
Tera T 1 trillion times larger than the unit it precedes 1012
Giga G 1 billion times larger than the unit it precedes 109
Mega M 1 million times larger than the unit it precedes 106
kilo k 1000 times larger than the unit it precedes 103
deci d 10 times smaller than the unit it precedes 10-1
centi c 100 times smaller than the unit it precedes 10-2
milli m 1000 times smaller than the unit it precedes 10-3
micro μ 1 million times smaller than the unit it precedes 10-6
nano n 1 billion times smaller than the unit it precedes 10-9
pico p 1 trillion times smaller than the unit it precedes 10-12

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 15


Scientific Notation
 Very large and very small numbers are represented with
scientific Notation.

 In scientific notation, a quantity is expressed as a product of


a number between 1 and 10 and a power of ten (10x).
For example:
47,000,0.0 = 4.7 x 105
0.00022 = 2.2 x 10-4

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 16


Outline:
 What is Electrical Engineering?

 SI Units

 Basic Concepts

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 17


Circuit Theory
 An electric circuit is a mathematical model
that approximates the behavior of an
actual electrical system.

 The term electric circuit is commonly used


to refer to an actual electrical system as
well as to the model that represents it.

 Circuit theory is a special case of


electromagnetic field theory. It is the study
of static and moving electric charges.
04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 18
Circuit Theory
 Three assumptions are required to use
circuit theory:
1. Electrical effects happen instantaneously
throughout a system.

2. The net charge on every component in the


system is always zero.

3. There is no magnetic coupling between the


components in a system.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 19


Basic Concepts
 Electric Charge
 Electric Current
 Voltage

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 20


Electric Charge
Charles-Augustin de Coulomb
 Charge is the characteristic property of subatomic particles (1735 - 1805)
responsible for electric phenomena.
 Electric charge is bipolar, meaning that electrical effects are
described in terms of positive and negative charges.
 The unit of quantity of electric charge is coulomb (C). +
 Electric charge exists in discrete quantities, which are integer Proton
multiples of the electronic charge, 1.6022×10−19 C. 1.602 x 10-19 C
 Electrical effects are attributed to both the separation of
charge and charges in motion. -
Electron
-1.602 x 10-19 C

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 21


Electric Charge
Charles-Augustin de Coulomb
• Charged particles exhibit forces. (1735 - 1805)

• Like charges repel each other.


- -
• Opposite charges attract each
other. - +
04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 22
Electric Current
 The rate of charge flow is known as the André-Marie
Ampère's
electric current. 1775-1836
 Symbol: i
 Units: Coulombs per second ≡ Amperes (A)
 Current has polarity.
 Direction of flow of current (conventionally) is
from positive to negative potential. Though
actual electronic current moves from negative
to positive potential.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 23


Electric Current
André-Marie
Ampère's
i = dq/dt 1775-1836

Where,
q = charge (Coulombs)
t = time (in seconds)

 Current cannot flow unless there is a closed


path and a stimulus to flow.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 24


Electric Current
Example 1: André-Marie
Ampère's
105 positively charged particles (each with charge 1.6×10-19 C) flow to 1775-1836
the right (+x direction) every nanosecond. How much electric current is
flowing?

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 25


Electric Current
Example 2: André-Marie
Ampère's
105 negatively charged particles (each with charge 1.6×10-19 C) flow to 1775-1836
the right (+x direction) every microsecond. How much electric current is
flowing?

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 26


Electric Current
André-Marie
Ampère's
1775-1836

Two different methods of labeling the same current.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 27


Electric Current
André-Marie
Ampère's
1775-1836

(a,b) Incomplete, improper, and incorrect definitions of a


current. (c) the correct definition of i1(t).

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 28


Voltage
 Electromotive Force (EMF): The stimulus to cause
a current to flow in a circuit. A battery or a
generator.
 Potential Difference (or Voltage): An EMF source
causes different potential to exist in a circuit at two
points connected to it. This difference of potential
causes a flow of current. Voltage is measured in
Volts (V).
 Reference: Voltage is measured with respect to a
reference. If not specified, the reference is taken
to be at 0 V and is termed as GROUND or less
frequently as EARTH.
04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 29
Voltage
Definition: energy per unit charge
Symbol: v
Units: Joules/Coulomb ≡ Volts (V)
v = dw/dq
where w = energy (in Joules),
q = charge (in Coulombs)

Subscript convention:
Vab means the potential at a minus that at b.
Vab ≡ Va - Vb

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 30


Voltage
 Conventions vary.
 Labels represent voltages with
respect to ground.
 If any other reference is required,
an arrow is used to mark it.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 31


Voltage

(a, b) These are inadequate definitions of a voltage. (a, b) Terminal B is 5 V positive with respect
(c) A correct definition includes both a symbol for to terminal A; (c,d) terminal A is 5 V positive
the variable and a plus-minus symbol pair. with respect to terminal B.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 32


Voltage
Example:
Find vab, vca, vcb
Note that the labeling convention has nothing to do with whether
or not v is positive or negative.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 33


Any questions?

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 34


Books
Text Book:
◦ Electric Circuits (11th Edition)
by James W. Nilsson and Susan A. Riedel.
Published in 2018.

Reference Book:
◦ Principles of Electric Circuits (9th Edition)
by Thomas L. Floyd.
Published in 2013.

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 35


That’s it for today.

See you next week!

04-Oct-2021 EE-103 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 36

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