Superposition Theorem
Superposition Theorem
Theorem
Superposition Theorem
Based on principle of linearity
• Definition:
“…voltage across or current through
any resistor or source may be
calculated by adding all the individual
voltage or currents caused by the
separate independent source acting
alone…”
Linearity Property
It is the property of an element describing a linear relationship between
cause and effect.
A linear circuit is one whose output is linearly related (or directly
proportional) to its input.
2. Additive property
If v1 and v2 are 2 functions such that
v1 = i1 R and v2 = i2 R then by additive property
→ v = (i1 + i2) R = v1 + v2
Superposition Theorem (Definition)
1V 1V
1Ω 1Ω I1 1Ω I2
I total
2V 2V
1A 1A
1Ω 1Ω I1 1Ω I2
I total
2V 2V
6Ω 4Ω
+
42V 3Ω Vx 10V
-
6Ω I1
4Ω
+
42V 3Ω Vx
-
TotalVoltage =
Vx = Vx( 42V ) + Vx(10V )
= 9.333 − 3.333 = 6V
Example 3: Use superposition to find ix
Step2:
Step 1:
Only 2A source connected(3V source is
Only 3V source connected(2A SC)
source is OC)
i x'' = 2x6/(6+9)=0.8 A
i x' =3/15=0.2 A
Step 3:Totalcurrent=0.2+0.8=1A
i x = 1.0 A
Step 1:
Only 10ma source connected in circuit(3mA source OC)
I=10mA