ELL 100 Introduction To Electrical Engineering: L 9: T R O F O C (N R)
ELL 100 Introduction To Electrical Engineering: L 9: T R O F O C (N R)
LECTURE 9:
TRANSIENT RESPONSE OF FIRST ORDER CIRCUITS
(NATURAL RESPONSE)
SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUITS
EXAMPLE
4
SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUITS
APPLICATIONS
Timers
6
SOURCE FREE RC CIRCUITS
APPLICATIONS
7
SOURCE FREE RC CIRCUITS
APPLICATIONS
Pulse Generators
Electronic filter
Tubelight choke
9
TRANSIENT RESPONSE OF FIRST ORDER CIRCUITS
• A first-order circuit is characterized by a first-order
differential equation.
• Example :
• a circuit comprising a resistor and capacitor
(RC circuit)
• a circuit comprising a resistor and an inductor
(RL circuit)
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TRANSIENT RESPONSE OF FIRST ORDER CIRCUITS
NATURAL RESPONSE
• The natural response of a circuit refers to the behavior (in terms of
voltage or current) with no external sources of excitation.
• The circuit has a response only because of the energy initially stored in
the energy storage elements (i.e. capacitor or inductor).
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
DERIVATION
• Assume the voltage v(t) across the capacitor.
• Since the capacitor is initially charged,
Assume that at time t = 0, the initial voltage is,
v(0) V0
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
VOLTAGE RESPONSE
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
TIME CONSTANT
t v(t)/V0
τ 0.36788
2τ 0.13534
3τ 0.04979
4τ 0.01832
5τ 0.00674
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
POWER DISSIPATION
The power dissipated in the resistor is
V0 2 2t /
p (t ) viR e
R
The energy absorbed by the resistor up to time t is
t t
V0 2 2 /
wR (t ) 0
p ( )d
0
R
e d
V0 2 1
e 2 /
| CV0 2 (1
t
0 e 2 /
-2t/τ
(1 – e )), RC
2R 2
1
t , wR ( ) CV0 2
2
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
• A circuit with series connection
of a resistor and inductor
i (t ) Rt
=> ln i (t ) I 0 e Rt / L
I0 L
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SOURCE FREE RL CIRCUIT
RESPONSE OF THE CIRCUIT
i (t ) I 0 e t /
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SOURCE FREE RL CIRCUIT
POWER DISSIPATION
- t /
v
Voltage across the resistor is R (t ) iR I 0 Re
-2 t /
The power dissipated in the resistor is p v R i I 0
2
Re
p ( )d 0 d
2 /
wR (t ) I 2
Re
0 0
1
I 0 Re
2 2 /
| LI 0 2 (1 e 2 / ),
t
0 L/R
2
1
t , wR () LI 0 2
2
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SOLVING NUMERICALS
Points to remember :
L Short-circuit Current i
(v = 0)
C Open-circuit Voltage v
(i = 0)
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
Q1. Consider the circuit below. Let vC (0)=15 V. Find vc , vx and ix for t > 0.
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
Solution :
• We first convert the given circuit into a simple R-C circuit.
• Find the equivalent resistance or the Thevenin resistance at the
capacitor terminals.
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
20 5
Req 4
20 5
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
t /
vC(t ) V0 ve(t ) 15 e tv/0.4
(tV 2.5 t
) 15 e V
we can use voltage division to get vx
12 2.5 t 2.5 t
vx vC 0.6(15e ) 9e V
12 8
vx 2.5 t
ix 0.75e A
12 30
SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
Q2. The switch in the circuit below is closed for a long time, and
then opened at t = 0. Find v(t) for t ≥ 0. Also calculate the energy
stored in the capacitor before opening of the switch.
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SOURCE-FREE RC CIRCUIT
Solution:
For t < 0, the switch is closed and the capacitor is an open circuit in
steady state, as represented in Fig.(a).
Using voltage division
9
vC (t ) (20)=15 V , t 0
93
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Solution: There are two ways we can solve this problem
Method -1:
The equivalent resistance is the same as the Thevenin resistance at the
inductor terminals. Because of the dependent source, we insert a voltage
source with vo = 1 V at the inductor terminals a-b, as shown below
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Applying KVL to the two loops,
1
2(i1 i2 ) 1 0 i1 i2 (1)
2
5
6i2 2i1 3i1 0 i2 i1 (2)
6
For loop 2,
5
6i2 2i1 3i1 0 i2 i1
6
di1 2
Substituting above into Eq. (3) gives i1 0
dt 3
i (t) 2 t
=> ln t |0 i (t ) i (0)e ( 2/3) t 10e ( 2/3) t A, t 0
i (0) 3
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
The voltage across the inductor is
di 2 ( 2/3) t 10 ( 2/3) t
vL 0.5(10) e e V
dt 3 3
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Q4. The switch in the circuit below is closed for a long time.
At t = 0, the switch is opened. Calculate i(t) for t > 0.
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Solution:
For t < 0, the switch is closed, and the inductor acts as a short circuit in
steady state. The 16-Ω resistor is short-circuited; the resulting circuit is
shown in Fig (a).
4 12
Req 2 5Ω Ω
4 12
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i1 8A
5
i (t ) i (0)e t / 6e 4t A
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Q5. In the circuit shown below, find io, vo, and i for all t > 0,
assuming that the switch was open for a long time and closed at t = 0.
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Solution :
It is better to first find the inductor current i and then obtain other
quantities from it.
For t < 0, the switch is open. Since the inductor acts like a short circuit to
DC, the 6-Ω resistor is short-circuited, so that we have the circuit shown
Hence, io = 0 and
10
i (t ) 2A t 0
23
vo (t ) 3i(t) 6 V t 0
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SOURCE-FREE RL CIRCUIT
Thus, i(0) = 2 A
For t > 0, the switch is closed, so that the voltage source is short-circuited
We now have a source-free RL circuit as shown. At the inductor
terminals, RTh 3 || 6 2
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SOURCE FREE RC CIRCUIT
Q1. Calculate time constants of the following circuits.
When the switch is thrown in position ‘2’, find at steady state condition
(i) the voltage across the each capacitor (ii) the charge across the each
capacitor (iii) the energy stored by the each capacitor
Answer: 7 μC 52
SOURCE FREE RC CIRCUIT
Q5. Refer to the circuit in Fig. Let vC (0) = 60 V. Determine vC, vx, and io
for t ≥ 0.