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Chapt02 PDF

This document contains solutions to practice problems (P.P.) related to circuit analysis. It provides calculations for current, voltage, power, and resistance in various circuit configurations using principles like Ohm's Law, Kirchhoff's Laws, voltage division, current division, and equivalent resistance calculations. The document demonstrates applying circuit analysis techniques to solve for unknown values in circuits containing resistors, voltage sources, and current sources.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views6 pages

Chapt02 PDF

This document contains solutions to practice problems (P.P.) related to circuit analysis. It provides calculations for current, voltage, power, and resistance in various circuit configurations using principles like Ohm's Law, Kirchhoff's Laws, voltage division, current division, and equivalent resistance calculations. The document demonstrates applying circuit analysis techniques to solve for unknown values in circuits containing resistors, voltage sources, and current sources.

Uploaded by

anik
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

February 5, 2006

CHAPTER 2

P.P.2.1 i = V/R = 110/12 = 9.167 A

P.P.2.2 (a) v = iR = 2 mA[10 kohms] = 20 V

(b) G = 1/R = 1/10 kohms = 100 µS

(c) p = vi = 20 volts[2 mA] = 40 mW

P.P.2.3 p = vi which leads to i = p/v = [20 cos2 (t) mW]/[10cos(t) mA]

or i = 2cos(t) mA

R = v/i = 10cos(t)V/2cos(t)mA = 5 kΩ

P.P.2.4 5 branches and 3 nodes. The 1 ohm and 2 ohm resistors are in parallel.
The 4 ohm resistor and the 10 volt source are also in parallel.

P.P.2.5 Applying KVL to the loop we get:

-10 + 4i – 8 + 2i = 0 which leads to i = 3A

v1 = 4i = 12V and v2 = -2i = –6V

P.P.2.6 Applying KVL to the loop we get:

-35 + 10i + 2vx + 5i = 0

But, vx = 10i and v0 = -5i. Hence,

-35 + 10i + 20i + 5i = 0 which leads to i = 1A.

Thus, vx = 10V and v0 = –5V


P.P.2.7 Applying KCL, 6 = i0 + [i0 /4] + [v0 /8], but i0 = v0/2

Which leads to: 6 = (v0/2) + (v0/8) + (v0/8) thus, v0 = 8V and i0 = 4A

P.P.2.8 2Ω i1 i3 4Ω

+ V1 - + V3 -
+ i2
5V -
- + 3V
Loop 1 Loop 2 +
V2 8Ω
-

At the top node, i1 = i 2 + i 3 (1)

For loop 1 -5 + V1 + V2 = 0
or V1 = 5 - V2 (2)

For loop 2 - V2 + V3 -3 = 0
or V3 = V2 + 3 (3)

Using (1) and Ohm’s law, we get

(V1/2) = (V2/8) + (V3/4)

and now using (2) and (3) in the above yields

[(5- V2)/2] = (V2/8) + (V2+3)/4

or V2 = 2 V

V1 = 5- V2 = 3V, V3 = 2+3 = 5V, i1 = (5-2)/2 = 1.5A,


i2 = 250 mA, i3 = 1.25A

P.P.2.9 2Ω 3Ω 4Ω

Req 6Ω 4Ω 5Ω

1Ω 3Ω
Combining the 4 ohm, 5 ohm, and 3ohm resistors in series gives 4+3+5 = 12.

But, 4 in parallel with 12 produces [4x12]/[4+12] = 48/16 = 3ohm.

So that the equivalent circuit is shown below.

2Ω 3Ω

Req 3Ω

Thus, Req = 1 + 2 + [6x6]/[6+6] = 6 Ω

20 Ω
P.P.2.10

8Ω 5Ω

20 Ω
18 Ω
Req 1Ω

Combining the 9 ohm resistor and the 18 ohm resistor yields [9x18]/[9+18] = 6 ohms.
Combining the 5 ohm and the 20 ohm resistors in parallel produces [5x20/(5+20)] = 4
ohms We now have the following circuit:

8Ω 4Ω

6Ω 1Ω
20 Ω

The 4 ohm and 1 ohm resistors can be combined into a 5 ohm resistor in parallel with a
20 ohm resistor. This will result in [5x20/(5+20)] = 4 ohms and the circuit shown below:

8Ω 4Ω

The 4 ohm and 2 ohm resistors are in series and can be replaced by a 6 ohm resistor.
This gives a 6 ohm resistor in parallel with a 6 ohm resistor, [6x6/(6+6)] = 3 ohms. We
now have a 3 ohm resistor in series with an 8 ohm resistor or 3 + 8 = 11ohms. Therefore:

Req = 11 ohms

P.P. 2.11
8||4 = 8+4 = 12S
8S 4S
12 S
Geq
Geq
2S
4S 2||4 = 2+4 = 6S 6S

12 S in series with 6 S = {12x6/(12+6)] = 4 or: Geq = 4 S


P.P.2.12 12 Ω

i1 + v1 - i2 + v1 -

6Ω + 4Ω +
15V + 15V +
- 10 Ω 40 Ω v2
- 8Ω v2
- -

6||12 = [6x12/(6+12)] = 4 ohm and 10||40 = [10x40/(10+40)] = 8 ohm.

Using voltage division we get:

v1 = [4/(4+8)] (15) = 5 volts, v2 = [8/12] (15) = 10 volts

i1 = v1/12 = 5/12 = 416.7 mA, i2 = v2/40 = 10/40 = 250 mA

P1 = v1 i1 = 5x5/12 = 2.083 watts, P2 = v2 i2 = 10x0.25 = 2.5 watts

P.P.2.13
1k Ω i1 i2

+ +
4k Ω
v1 10mA 5k Ω 20k Ω v2 4k Ω
3k Ω 10mA
- -

Using current division, i1 = i2 = (10 mA)(4 kohm/(4 kohm + 4 kohm)) = 5mA

(a) v1 = (3 kohm)(5 mA) = 15 volts


v2 = (4 kohm)(5 mA) = 20 volts

(b) For the 3k ohm resistor, P1 = v1 x i1 = 15x5 = 75 mw


For the 20k ohm resistor, P2 = (v2)2 /20k = 20 mw
(c) The total power supplied by the current source is equal to:
P = v2 x 10 mA = 20x10 = 200 mw
P.P.2.14

Ra = [R1 R2 + R2 R3 + R3 R1]/ R1 = [10x20 + 20x40 + 40x10]/10 = 140 ohms

Rb = [R1 R2 + R2 R3 + R3 R1]/ R2 = 1400/20 = 70 ohms

Rc = [R1 R2 + R2 R3 + R3 R1]/ R3 = 1400/40 = 35 ohms

P.P.2.15 We first find the equivalent resistance, R. We convert the delta


sub-network to a wye connected form as shown below:

13 Ω
i
13 Ω a
a
10 Ω
24 Ω
24 Ω 10 Ω
100V 20Ω
a’ b’
+
- 6Ω 10 Ω
30 Ω 50 Ω
n
b 15 Ω
b
c’

Ra’n = 20x30/[20 + 30 + 50] = 6 ohms, Rb’n = 20x50/100 = 10 ohms


Rc’n = 30x50/100 = 15 ohms.

Thus, Rab = 13 + (24 + 6)||(10 + 10) + 15 = 28 + 30x20/(30 + 20) = 40 ohms.

i = 100/ Rab = 100/40 = 2.5 amps

P.P.2.16
For the parallel case, v = v0 = 110volts.
p = vi i = p/v = 40/110 = 364 mA

For the series case, v = v0/N = 110/10 = 11 volts


i = p/v = 40/11 = 3.64 amps

P.P.2.17 We use equation (2.61)


(a) R1 = 50x10-3/ (1-10-3) = 0.05/999 = 50 mΩ (shunt)

(b) R2 = 50x10-3/(100x10-3 – 10-3) = 50/99 = 505 mΩ (shunt)

(c) R3 = 50x10-3/(10x10-3-10-3) = 50/9 = 5.556 Ω (shunt)

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