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EEE121 Lecture 32

The document discusses step responses of series and parallel RLC circuits. It provides equations to model overdamped, underdamped, and critically damped responses. Examples are given to find voltages and currents for various RLC circuits over time.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views37 pages

EEE121 Lecture 32

The document discusses step responses of series and parallel RLC circuits. It provides equations to model overdamped, underdamped, and critically damped responses. Examples are given to find voltages and currents for various RLC circuits over time.

Uploaded by

azharjaved
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Previous Lecture 31 The Source Free Parallel RLC Circuit

Lecture 32
Example related to Source free Parallel RLC circuit
Example Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit of following Fig.

Example
Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit of following Fig.

Example
Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit of following Fig.

Example
Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit of following Fig.

Example
Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit of following Fig.

Example
Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit of following Fig.

Step Response of a Series RLC Circuit

Thus, the complete solutions for the overdamped, underdamped, and critically damped cases are:

The values of the constants A1 and A2 are obtained from the initial conditions: v(0) and dv(0)/dt . Keep in mind that v and i are, respectively, the voltage across the capacitor and the current through the inductor. Therefore, the above Eq. only applies for finding v. But once the capacitor voltage vC = v is known, we can determine i = C dv/dt, which is the same current through the capacitor, inductor, and resistor. Hence, the voltage across the resistor is vR = iR, while the inductor voltage is vL = L di/dt.

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Example For the circuit in Fig., find v(t) and i(t) for t > 0. Consider these cases: R = 5 ,R = 4 , andR = 1 .

Figure plots the responses for the three cases. From this figure, we observe that the critically damped response approaches the step input of 24 V the fastest.

Response for three degrees of damping

Step Response of a Parallel RLC Circuit

Thus, the complete solutions for the overdamped, underdamped, and critically damped cases are:

The constants A1 and A2 in each case can be determined from the initial conditions for i and di/dt . Again, we should keep in mind that above Eq. only applies for finding the inductor current i. But once the inductor current iL = i is known, we can find v = L di/dt, which is the same voltage across inductor, capacitor, and resistor. Hence, the current through the resistor is iR = v/R, while the capacitor current is iC = C dv/dt.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Example
In the circuit in the following Fig., find i(t) and iR(t) for t > 0.

Material of the Course ECA-1 (EEE121)


All the material for the 32 lectures have been taken and modified from the following two books

Principles of Electric Circuits By FLOYD (Chapter 1 to Chapter 9) Basic Engineering Circuit Analysis By J. David Irwin & R Mark Nelms (Chapter 6 to Chapter 8)

8th Edition

8th Edition

Sr. No.
1 2 3 4 5

Main Topics covered during this course


Quantities and Units Voltage, Current, and Resistance Ohm's Law Energy and Power Series Circuits

6
7 8 9 10 11

Parallel Circuits
Series-Parallel Circuits Circuit Theorems and Conversions Branch, Loop, and Node Analyses Capacitors , Inductors RL, RC, and RLC Circuits

Good Luck

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