Exp 6
Exp 6
1.0 Objectives:
- To study Thevenin Theorem. - To study maximum power transfer to a load. - To study the load line equation.
2.0 Theory:
- Thvenin's Theorem states that we can replace entire network, exclusive of the load, by an equivalent circuit that contains only an independent voltage source in series with an impedance (resistance) such that the current-voltage relationship at the load is unchanged. Thevenin's Theorem is especially useful in analyzing power systems and other circuits where one particular resistor in the circuit (called the "load" resistor) is subject to change, and re-calculation of the circuit is necessary with each trial value of load resistance, to determine voltage across it and current through it. The advantage in performing the "Thevenin conversion" to the simpler circuit, of course, is that it makes load voltage and load current so much easier to solve than in the original network. Calculating the equivalent Thevenin source voltage and series resistance is actually quite easy.
2.1 Thevenin's Theorem Procedures 1. Pick a good breaking point in the circuit (cannot split a dependent source and its control variable). 2. 3. Compute the open circuit voltage, VOC. Compute the Thevenin equivalent resistance, RTh (or impedance, ZTh). a. If there are only independent sources, then short circuit all the voltage sources and open circuit the current sources (just like superposition). b. If there are only dependent sources, then must use a test voltage or current source in order to calculate RTh= vTest/iTest (or ZTh=VTest/ITest). c. If there are both independent and dependent sources, then compute RTh (or ZTh) from RTh= vOC/iSC (or ZTh=VOC/ISC). 4. Replace circuit with Thevenin/Norton equivalent. VOC in series with RTh (or ZTh).
Note: for 3(b) the equivalent network is merely RTh (or ZTh), that is, no current or voltage sources. 2.2The Maximum Power Theorem Whenever we have a source of electrical energy we might pose the question of what circumstances produce maximum load power. Consider a load connected to a source, and consider that the source is well represented by a Thevenin equivalent model. Then the situation is the one shown in the figure below.
First calculate the voltage across the load resistor, calling that voltage Vload = Vo Rload/(Ro+ Rload) 2
Vload.
Then the power dissipated in Rload is: =(Vload)2 / Rload = (Vo)2 Rload/(Ro+ Rload)2
For an extremum (maximum or minimum) we differentiate the load power with respect to Rload, and set that derivative to zero. The derivative is: (Vo)2(Ro- Rload)/(Ro+ Rload) The maximum power for positive load resistance occurs when: Rload = Ro When the load resistance is equal to the internal resistance of the source, the load voltage is exactly half of the open circuit voltage, so the maximum power delivered to the load is: Pmax = (Vo )2/(4Ro) Whenever a load resistance is equal to the internal resistance of a source, the two (source and resistance) are said to be matched.
3. Equipment:
1- DC Power supply. SN. = 097082 2- Resistor substitution box SN. = 8268012 3- Discrete Resistors. 4- Bread Board.
4. Procedure:
3.1. Part (A): Thevnin Theory:
Fig.1 Circuit connection for Thevenin theory experiment 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Given R1=R3=2k , R2=R4=1k , RL=5k
Measure the exact value of the resistors Connect the circuit as shown in Fig.1. Set the power supply Vs=10 Volts (measure it using DMM) Measure the current passing through RL= IRL Disconnect RL and measure the voltage between nodes a and b, Vth Disconnect the supply voltage and replace it with awire (short circuit) and use an ohmmeter to measure Thevenin resistance between terminals a and b, Rth
8.
Fig.2 shows Thevenin equivalent circuit of the network shown in Fig.1. The current flowing through the load resistance RL is given by: IRL= Vth/ (Rth + RL) Find the theoretical and the measured values of IRL.
Experiment#6 Thevenin Equivalent Circuits 4.2 Part (B): load Line and Maximum Power Transformation:
Fig.3 Circuit connection for the load line and maximum power transfer 1. Given R1= 2K 2. 3. Set the power supply Vs to 10 Volts (measure it using DMM) Vary the value of RL as shown in Table 2 and measure the current through and the voltage across.
Table 3 results for the current through and voltage across RL RL () VRL (Volts) IRL (mA) 0 0 5 500 2 4 1000 3.333 3.333 1500 4.286 2.857 2000 5 2.5 2500 5.556 2.222 3000 6 2 5000 7.143 1.429 8000 8 1 12000 8.571 0.714
Table 6 results of current through and voltage across RL RL () VRL (Volts) IRL (mA) 0 0 5.025 500 2 4.019 1000 3.35 3.346 1500 4.3 2.868 2000 5.01 2.508 2500 5.6 2.229 3000 6.02 2.006 5000 7.2 1.432 8000 8.02 1.003 12000 8.6 0.717
Power=VxI (mW) 0 8.1 11.2 12.3 12.6 12.4 12.1 10.3 8.05 6.2
6.0 Simulation:
6.1 DC Voltage:
6.2 Current:
7.0 Questions:
Q1: Find theoretically the Thevenin equivalent for the circuit shown in Fig.1. Vth: Open circuit: Req = R1 + R4 + R3 = 2 + 1 + 2 = 5 k I = V/ R = 10 / 5 = 2 mA V4 = Vth = I x R =2 x 1 = 2 V Rth: Short circuit: -10 + (2 x I1) + [1 x ( I1 - Isc)] + (2 x I1) = 0 (1) [1 x ( Isc I1)] + (1 x Isc) = 0 (2) Solving (1) & (2): I1 = 2.22 mA Isc = 1.11 mA Rth = Vth / Isc = 2 / 1.11 = 1.80 k
Q2: Calculate the power dissipated in RL. It is Solved in table 6. Q3: On a graph paper plot the power dissipated versus RL. It is in figure 4. Q4: What is the value of RL for max power transfer? From figure 4 and table 6: Pmax = 12.6 mW at RL = 2000 Q5: On graph paper plot IRL versus VRL. It is in figure 5. Q6: From the plot of (Q5) if VRL = 6.6 v find the value of RL. If VRL = 6.6 v then IRL = 1.7 mA RL = VRL / IRL = (6.6/1.7) = 3.88 k = 3880
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8. Conclusion:
1. Thevenin's theorem for electrical networks states that any combination of voltage sources and resistors with two terminals is electrically equivalent to a single voltage source V and a single series resistor R. 2. The power dissipated is maximum when Rth equals RL.
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9. References:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm's_law http://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/tutorials/ohm/Q.ohm.intro.combo.html Lab manual ENG207 fundamentals of electric circuits
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