Second
Second
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Guru Prasad
Shri Madhwa Vadiraja Institute of Technology and Management (SMVITM)
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Guruprasad
Assistant Professor, MIT, Manipal.
A typical second order circuit consists of two energy storing elements. A series RLC circuit is an
example for second order circuit. Figure 1 shows a series RLC circuit.
Analyzing RLC circuit involves the investigating circuit behavior to different time varying input
signals.
d2 Vc R dVc Vc
2
+ + =0
dt L dt LC
Assume a solution Vc = Aest
R Aest
As2 est + Asest + =0
L LC
1
Avoiding trivial solutions est = 0 and A=0
R 1
s2 + s+ =0 (2)
L LC
r
R R 1
s1,2 =− ± ( )2 −
2L 2L LC
Equation (2) is called characteristic equation. If either Vc1 = A1 es1 t or Vc1 = A2 es2 t satisfies the
characteristic equation then sum of two terms also satisfies . Hence Vc = A1 es1 t + A2 es2 t is solution
to homogeneous equation. where A1 and A2 are constants and found from initial condition.
Next step is to find particular solution.
d2 Vp R dVp Vp Vi
2
+ + =
dt L dt LC LC
Let Vp = K be the solution then
K = Vi
Hence Vp = Vi is the particular solution. Total solution is
dVc,0 i0 d
= = [A1 es1 t + A2 es2 t + Vi,0 ]t=0 (5)
dt C dt
From equation (4) and (5), A1 and A2 can be determined.
R 1
α= ωn2 =
2L LC
1. Roots are real and distinct
α2 > ωn2
Roots are sum of two exponentially decaying components. Hence the response is over damped.
Vc = A1 est + A2 test
2
3. Roots are complex
α2 < ωn2
When roots are complex, they always occur in conjugate pair. i.e if α2 = ωn2 − α2
s1 = −α + jω s2 = −α − jω
So solution is
Vc = A1 e(−α+jω)t + A2 e(−α−jω)t
From Euler’s theorem,
ejθ = cosθ + jsinθ
If Vc to be real, A1 and A2 must also be chosen as complex conjugates namely A2 = A∗1 .
Vc = A1 e(−α+jω)t + A∗1 e(−α−jω)t
= e−αt [A1 cos(ωt) + jA1 sin(ωt)] + e−αt [A∗1 cos(ωt) − jA∗1 sin(ωt)]
= e−αt [(A1 + A∗1 )cos(ωt) + (jA1 − jA∗1 )sin(ωt)]
Vc = e−αt [Acos(ωt) + Bsin(ωt)]
Where A = A1 + A∗1 = 2Re[A1 ] and B = jA1 − jA∗1 = −2Im[A1 ] But sum of sine and cosine
must be another sine with a phase difference,
Vc = Ae−αt sin(ωt + θ)
The response is sum of decaying exponential component and sinusoidal. The resulting wave form
is exponentially decaying sinusoidal.
Illustration
For the circuit shown in Figure 1, Assume Vin =5V, L=1mH, R = 10Ω and C=0.01mF. Determine Vc .
d2 Vc dVc
108 Vi = 2
+ 106 + 108 Vc
dt dt
1. Step 1 : Characteristic equation
s2 + 106 s + 108 = 0
s1,2 = −5000 ± j8660
Roots are complex hence the response is under-damped.
2. Step 2: Solution
Vc = e−αt [Acosωt + Bsinωt] + Vi
R
α= = 5000 ω = 8660 Vi = 5V
2L
3. Step 3: Find Constants
At t=0
Vc,0 = Vi,0 + A
A = −5V
Taking derivative of Vc equation at t=0
dVc,0 i0 d
= = [e−αt [Acosωt + Bsinωt] + Vi ]
dt C dt
i0
= −αA + ωB
C
0 = 25000 + 8660B
B = −2.88
3
The complete solution is
4
Figure 3: Ngspice Output
Exercise
For the above problem determine the response if i) R = 500Ω ii) R = 0Ω iii) Calculate the value of R
for which the system response will be Critically Damped.
Reference
1. DeCarlo and Lin, Linear Circuit Analysis, Second edition, Oxford publisher, 2005.
2. Ananth Agarwal and Jeffrey H. Lang, Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits,
Elsevier- Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2016.
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