P272fall10-19 PDF
P272fall10-19 PDF
P272fall10-19 PDF
LC Circuits
RLC Circuits
AC Circuit Theory
LC Circuits
• Consider the RC and LC
series circuits shown:
++++ ++++
----
C R C L
----
• Suppose that the circuits are
formed at t=0 with the
capacitor charged to value Q.
There is a qualitative difference in the time development of the
currents produced in these two cases. Why??
RC: LC:
current decays exponentially current oscillates
I
I
0 0
0 t t
LC Oscillations
(qualitative)
I =0 I = −I0
+ +
- -
C L ⇒ C L
Q = +Q0 Q=0
⇑ ⇓
I = +I0 I =0
- -
C L ⇐ C L
+ +
Q=0 Q = −Q0
Multi-part Clicker
t=0 t=t 1
• At t=0, the capacitor in the LC
circuit shown has a total charge a
Q0. At t = t1, the capacitor is + +
uncharged. Q = Q0 L Q =0 L
- -
– What is the value of Vab=Vb-Va, C C
2A the voltage across the inductor b
at time t1?
(a) Vab < 0 (b) Vab = 0 (c) Vab > 0
(a) UL1 < UC1 (b) UL1 = UC1 (c) UL1 > UC1
Q12 1 2 Q02
U C1 = =0 U L1 = LI 1 = >0
2C 2 2C
Clicker problem:
a) VL = 0 b) VL = Qmax/C c) VL = Qmax/2C
3) What is the potential difference across the inductor when the current
is maximum?
a) VL = 0 b) VL = Qmax/C c) VL = Qmax/2C
LC Oscillations
(mechanical analogy, for R=0)
• What is the oscillation frequency ω0? I
• Begin with the loop rule:
+ +
2
d Q Q
Q C L
- -
L 2 + =0
dt C
• Guess solution: (just harmonic oscillator!)
remember: d2x
Q = Q0 cos(ω t + φ) m 2 + kx = 0
dt
where φ, Q0 determined from initial conditions
• Differentiate:
dQ d 2Q Q
= −ω Q0 sin(ω t + φ ) L 2 + =0
dt dt C
d 2Q 2
2
= −ω Q0 cos(ωt + φ )
dt
• Substitute into loop eqn:
1 1
( 2
)
L − ω Q0 cos(ω t + φ ) + (Q0 cos(ω t + φ )) = 0 ⇒ − ω L + = 0
C
2
C
Therefore, which we could have determined
1 from the mechanical analogy to SHO:
ω = ω =
k
=
1/ C
=
1
LC m L LC
Multi-part clicker problem t=0
• At t=0 the capacitor has charge Q0; the resulting
oscillations have frequency ω0. The maximum + +
current in the circuit during these oscillations has Q = Q0 L
value I0. - -
C
3A – What is the relation between ω0 and ω2, the
frequency of oscillations when the initial charge =
2Q0?
(a) ω2 = 1/2 ω0 (b) ω2 = ω0 (c) ω2 = 2ω0
Energy in Inductor
1 2 2 2
U B (t) = Lω Q0 sin (ω t + φ) 0
2 t
1
ω =
⇒
LC UB
1 2
U B (t ) = Q 0 sin 2 (ω t + φ )
2C
Q02
Therefore, UE (t) +UB (t) = 0
2C t
Inductor-Capacitor Circuits
Solving a LC circuit problem; Suppose ω=1/sqrt(LC)=3 and
given the initial conditions,
Q(t = 0) = 5C
I (t = 0) = 15 A
Solve find Q0 and φ0, to get complete solution using,
Q(t = 0) = 5 = Q0 cos(0 + φ0 )
I (t = 0) = 15 = −Q0ω sin (0 + φ0 ) = −3Q0 sin (0 + φ0 )
and we find,
2
15
[ ]
(5) + − = Q0 2 sin 2 (φ0 ) + cos 2 (φ0 ) = Q0 2 , Q0 = 5 2
2
3
15
φ0 = inv. tan − , φ0 = −45
o
5⋅3
Remember harmonic oscillators !!
Q(t ) = Q0 cos(ωt + φ0 )
Q(t ) = Q0 sin(ωt + φ1 )
Q(t ) = Q0 (cos(ωt ) cos(φ0 ) − sin(ωt ) sin(φ0 ))
Q(t ) = A cos(ωt ) + B sin(ωt )
Inductor-Capacitor-Resistor Circuit
Q d 2Q
0 = + RI + L
C dt 2
d 2Q dQ Q
0=L +R +
dt 2 dt C
2 2 2
1 R 1 R 1 R
> = <
LC 4 L2 LC 4 L2 LC 4 L2
Inductor-Capacitor-Resistor Circuit
Solving for all the terms
Q(t ) = Ae −αt cos(ω ' t + φ )
R
− t 1 R 2
= Ae 2 L cos − t +φ
LC 4 L2
R 1 R2
α = and ω ' = −
2L LC 4 L2
2
1 R
Solution for underdamped circuit; >
LC 4 L2
For other solutions, use starting form, solve for λ and λ′,
Mechanical
ignition in a
car
1
ω=
LC
Energy Check for LC circuits
Energy in Capacitor UE
1 2
U E (t ) = Q0 cos 2 (ωt + φ )
2C
Energy in Inductor
1 2 2 2
U B (t) = Lω Q0 sin (ω t + φ) 0
2 t
1
ω =
⇒
LC UB
1 2
U B (t ) = Q 0 sin 2 (ω t + φ )
2C
Q02
Therefore, UE (t) +UB (t) = 0
2C t
Inductor-Capacitor (LC) Circuit Example
Solving a LC circuit problem; Suppose ω=1/sqrt(LC)=3 and
given the initial conditions,
Q(t = 0) = 5C
I (t = 0) = 15 A
Solve find Q0 and φ0, to get complete solution using,
Q(t = 0) = 5 = Q0 cos(0 + φ0 )
I (t = 0) = 15 = −Q0ω sin (0 + φ0 ) = −3Q0 sin (0 + φ0 )
and we find,
2
15
[ ]
(5) + − = Q0 2 sin 2 (φ0 ) + cos 2 (φ0 ) = Q0 2 , Q0 = 5 2
2
3
15
φ0 = inv. tan − , φ0 = −45
o
5⋅3
Remember harmonic oscillators !!
Q(t ) = Q0 cos(ωt + φ0 )
Q(t ) = Q0 sin(ωt + φ1 )
Q(t ) = Q0 (cos(ωt ) cos(φ0 ) − sin(ωt ) sin(φ0 ))
Q(t ) = A cos(ωt ) + B sin(ωt )
Resistor-Inductor-Capacitor (RLC) Circuit
Q d 2Q
0 = + RI + L
C dt 2
d 2Q dQ Q
0=L +R +
dt 2 dt C
2 2 2
1 R 1 R 1 R
> = <
LC 4 L2 LC 4 L2 LC 4 L2
Inductor-Capacitor-Resistor Circuit
Important:
I(t) is same throughout – just
like the DC case.
Alternating Currents (Chap 31.1)
Since the currents & voltages are sinusoidal, their values change
over time and their average values are zero.
i 2
( (
(t ) = I 0 cos ωt )) 2
2
1 I
i 2 (t ) = (I 0 cos(ωt )) = I 02 (1 + cos(2ωt ) ) = 0
2
2 2
2 I0
I RMS = i (t ) =
2
Similarly: 2 V0
VRMS = v (t ) =
2
Alternating Currents ; Phasors
A convenient method to describe currents and voltages in AC
circuits is “Phasors”. Since currents and voltages in circuits with
capacitors & inductors have different phase relations, we introduce
a phasor diagram. For a current,
i = I cos(ωt )
We can represent this by a vector
rotating about the origin. The angle
of the vector is given by ωt and the
magnitude of the current is its
projection on the X-axis.
v R = VR cos(ωt ) = iR = I cos(ωt )R
and VR = IR (just like DC case)
I(t)=Icos(ωt)
V(t)=RIcos(ωt)
ωt →
a b c d e f
I I
v= cos(ωt − 90) = [cos ωt cos 90 + sin ωt sin 90]
ωC ωC
I
= sin ωt
ωC
Capacitor in AC circuit; I & V versus ω t
i(t)=Icos(ωt)
v(t)=(I/ωC)sin(ωt)
a b c d e f
ωt →
V(t)=(I/ωC)sin(ωt)= (I/ωC)cos(ωt-π/2)
Alternating Currents: Inductor in AC circuit
v(t)= - ILωsin(ωt)
a b c d e f
ωt →