1 / 90

Ask

Ask. Alma 5:26   26 And now behold, I say unto you, my brethren, if ye have experienced a change of heart, and if ye have felt to sing the song of redeeming love, I would ask , can ye feel so now? . Lecture 20 – Exam 2 Review. Chapters 4 – 6, 8. Exam 2. 12 – 15 March (Monday – Thursday)

hamish
Télécharger la présentation

Ask

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ask Alma 5:26   26 And now behold, I say unto you, my brethren, if ye have experienced a change of heart, and if ye have felt to sing the song of redeeming love, I would ask, can ye feel so now? Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  2. Lecture 20 – Exam 2 Review Chapters 4 – 6, 8 Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  3. Exam 2 • 12 – 15 March (Monday – Thursday) • Chapters 4 – 6 and 8 • 20 questions • 15 multiple choice (answer on bubble sheet!) • 1 point each • 2 or 3 long answer (show your work!) • 5 points each • Closed book! • Calculators not allowed • Three hour time limit • Study lecture slides and homework Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  4. Exam 2 Review…Overview • Capacitors and Inductors • Measuring Signal Strength • Phasors • Impedance • AC RLC Circuits • AC Equivalent Circuits • DC Transient Response • Frequency Response • Basic Filters • Op-Amps Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  5. i + L – + C – i Capacitors & Inductors Note symmetry of capacitor and inductor equations! Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  6. Capacitors & Inductors Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  7. Capacitors & Inductors • What is the difference between the voltage and current behavior of capacitors and inductors? Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  8. Capacitors & Inductors • What is the difference between the voltage and current behavior of capacitors and inductors? Capacitor current iC(t) Inductor voltage vL(t) NB: both can change instantaneously Capacitor voltage vC(t) Inductor current iL(t) NB: neither can change instantaneously Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  9. Capacitors & Inductors • Find the voltage v(t) for a capacitor C = 0.5F with the current as shown and v(0) = 0 Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  10. Capacitors & Inductors • Find the voltage v(t) for a capacitor C = 0.5F with the current as shown and v(0) = 0 Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  11. Capacitors & Inductors • Find the voltage v(t) for a capacitor C = 0.5F with the current as shown and v(0) = 0 Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  12. Capacitors & Inductors • Find the voltage v(t) for a capacitor C = 0.5F with the current as shown and v(0) = 0 Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  13. Capacitors & Inductors • Find the voltage v(t) for a capacitor C = 0.5F with the current as shown and v(0) = 0 • NB: The final value of the capacitor voltage after the current source has stopped charging the capacitor depends on two things: • The initial capacitor voltage • The history of the capacitor current Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  14. Measuring Signal Strength • Compute the rms value of the sinusoidal current i(t) = I cos(ωt) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  15. Measuring Signal Strength • Compute the rms value of the sinusoidal current i(t) = I cos(ωt) Integrating a sinusoidal waveform over 2 periods equals zero Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  16. Measuring Signal Strength • Compute the rms value of the sinusoidal current i(t) = I cos(ωt) The RMS value of any sinusoid signal is always equal to 0.707 times the peak value (regardless of phase or frequency) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  17. + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  18. + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) • Write voltages in phasor notation Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  19. + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) • Write voltages in phasor notation • Convert phasor voltages from polar to rectangular form (see Appendix A) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  20. + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) • Write voltages in phasor notation • Convert phasor voltages from polar to rectangular form (see Appendix A) • Combine voltages Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  21. + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) • Write voltages in phasor notation • Convert phasor voltages from polar to rectangular form (see Appendix A) • Combine voltages • Convert rectangular back to polar Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  22. + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) • Write voltages in phasor notation • Convert phasor voltages from polar to rectangular form (see Appendix A) • Combine voltages • Convert rectangular back to polar • Convert from phasor to time domain NB: the answer is NOT simply the addition of the amplitudes of v1(t) and v2(t) (i.e. 15 + 15), and the addition of their phases (i.e. π/4 + π/12) Bring ωt back Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  23. Im + – + – + – v1(t) v2(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ π/6 Vs(jω) 14.49 Re 25.10 Phasors • Compute the phasor voltage for the equivalent voltage vs(t) v1(t) = 15cos(377t+π/4) v2(t) = 15cos(377t+π/12) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  24. i(t) i(t) i(t) + vR(t) – + vC(t) – + vL(t) – R C L + – + – + – + – Vs(jω) vs(t) vs(t) vs(t) ~ ~ ~ ~ I(jω) + VZ(jω) – Z Impedance Impedance: complex resistance (has no physical significance) • Allows us to use network analysis methods such as node voltage, mesh current, etc. • Capacitors and inductors act as frequency-dependent resistors Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  25. Im ωL ZL π/2 Re R + – + R – Vs(jω) ~ ZR -π/2 + C – + L – ZC I(jω) -1/ωC + VZ(jω) – Z Impedance Impedance of resistors, inductors, and capacitors Phasor domain Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  26. R1 L ZEQ R2 C Impedance • Find the equivalent impedance (ZEQ) ω = 104 rads/s, C = 10uF, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 50Ω, L = 10mH Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  27. R1 L ZEQ R2 C Impedance • Find the equivalent impedance (ZEQ) ω = 104 rads/s, C = 10uF, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 50Ω, L = 10mH Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  28. ZEQ1 ZEQ Impedance • Find the equivalent impedance (ZEQ) ω = 104 rads/s, C = 10uF, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 50Ω, L = 10mH R1 L NB: at this frequency (ω) the circuit has an inductive impedance (reactance or phase is positive) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  29. AC RLC Circuits AC Circuit Analysis • Identify the AC sources and note the excitation frequency (ω) • Convert all sources to the phasor domain • Represent each circuit element by its impedance • Solve the resulting phasor circuit using network analysis methods • Convert from the phasor domain back to the time domain Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  30. R1 L vs(t) R2 C + – ~ ia(t) ib(t) AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  31. R1 L vs(t) R2 C + – ~ ia(t) ib(t) AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF • Note frequencies of AC sources Only one AC source - ω = 1500 rad/s Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  32. R1 L ZR1 ZL vs(t) R2 C + – ZC ~ Vs(jω) ZR2 + – ia(t) ib(t) ~ Ia(jω) Ib(jω) AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF • Note frequencies of AC sources • Convert to phasor domain Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  33. ZR1 ZL ZC Vs(jω) ZR2 + – ~ Ia(jω) Ib(jω) AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF • Note frequencies of AC sources • Convert to phasor domain • Represent each element by its impedance Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  34. Vs(jω) + – ~ AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF +ZR1– +ZL– • Solve using network analysis • Mesh current + ZC – + ZR2 – Ia(jω) Ib(jω) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  35. Vs(jω) + – ~ AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF +ZR1– +ZL– • Solve using network analysis • Mesh current + ZC – + ZR2 – Ia(jω) Ib(jω) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  36. Vs(jω) + – ~ AC RLC Circuits • Find ia(t) and ib(t) vs(t) = 15cos(1500t)V, R1 = 100Ω, R2 = 75Ω, L = 0.5H, C = 1uF +ZR1– +ZL– • Convert to Time domain + ZC – + ZR2 – Ia(jω) Ib(jω) Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  37. I + V – Load Source Load Load I I VT(jω) IN(jω) + V – + V – ZT + – ZN AC Equivalent Circuits Thévenin and Norton equivalent circuits apply in AC analysis • Equivalent voltage/current are complex and frequency dependent Thévenin Equivalent Norton Equivalent Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  38. Z3 Z1 Z3 Z1 a a + – Z2 Z2 ZT Vs(jω) Z4 Z4 b b AC Equivalent Circuits Computation of Thévenin and Norton Impedances: • Remove the load (open circuit at load terminal) • Zero all independent sources • Voltage sources short circuit (v = 0) • Current sources open circuit (i = 0) • Compute equivalent impedance across load terminals (with load removed) ZL NB: same procedure as equivalent resistance Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  39. Z3 Z1 a Z3 Z1 a + – Z2 + VT – Vs(jω) + – Z2 Vs(jω) Z4 Z4 b b AC Equivalent Circuits Computing Thévenin voltage: • Remove the load (open circuit at load terminals) • Define the open-circuit voltage (Voc) across the load terminals • Chose a network analysis method to find Voc • node, mesh, superposition, etc. • Thévenin voltage VT = Voc NB: same procedure as equivalent resistance Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  40. Z3 Z1 a Z3 Z1 a + – Z2 IN Vs(jω) + – Z2 Vs(jω) Z4 Z4 b b AC Equivalent Circuits Computing Norton current: • Replace the load with a short circuit • Define the short-circuit current (Isc) across the load terminals • Chose a network analysis method to find Isc • node, mesh, superposition, etc. • Norton current IN = Isc NB: same procedure as equivalent resistance Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  41. L Rs vs(t) + vL – + – C ~ RL AC Equivalent Circuits • Find the Thévenin equivalent ω = 103 Hz, Rs = 50Ω, RL = 50Ω, L = 10mH, C = 0.1uF Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  42. L Rs vs(t) + vL – + – C ~ RL AC Equivalent Circuits • Find the Thévenin equivalent ω = 103 Hz, Rs = 50Ω, RL = 50Ω, L = 10mH, C = 0.1uF • Note frequencies of AC sources Only one AC source - ω = 103 rad/s Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  43. L ZL Rs Zs vs(t) + vL – + – C ~ Vs(jω) RL ZC + – ~ ZLD AC Equivalent Circuits • Find the Thévenin equivalent ω = 103 Hz, Rs = 50Ω, RL = 50Ω, L = 10mH, C = 0.1uF • Note frequencies of AC sources • Convert to phasor domain Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  44. AC Equivalent Circuits • Find the Thévenin equivalent ω = 103 Hz, Rs = 50Ω, RL = 50Ω, L = 10mH, C = 0.1uF • Note frequencies of AC sources • Convert to phasor domain • Find ZT • Remove load & zero sources ZL Zs ZC Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  45. AC Equivalent Circuits • Find the Thévenin equivalent ω = 103 Hz, Rs = 50Ω, RL = 50Ω, L = 10mH, C = 0.1uF ZL • Note frequencies of AC sources • Convert to phasor domain • Find ZT • Remove load & zero sources • Find VT(jω) • Remove load Zs Vs(jω) ZC + VT(jω) – + – ~ NB: Since no current flows in the circuit once the load is removed: Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  46. ZT VT(jω) + – ~ ZLD AC Equivalent Circuits • Find the Thévenin equivalent ω = 103 Hz, Rs = 50Ω, RL = 50Ω, L = 10mH, C = 0.1uF ZL Zs Vs(jω) ZC + – ~ ZLD Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  47. vs R1 + – t = 0 R2 C DC Transient Response Transient response of a circuit consists of 3 parts: • Steady-state response prior to the switching on/off of a DC source • Transient response – the circuit adjusts to the DC source • Steady-state response following the transient response DC Source Energy element Switch Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  48. R1 R1 t → ∞ t = 0 vs vs + – + – R2 R2 R3 R3 C C DC Transient Response – DC Steady-State Initial condition x(0): DC steady state before a switch is first activated • x(0–): right before the switch is closed • x(0+): right after the switch is closed Final condition x(∞): DC steady state a long time after a switch is activated Final condition Initial condition Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  49. DC Transient Response – DC Steady-State Remember – capacitor voltages and inductor currentscannot change instantaneously • Capacitor voltages and inductor currents don’t change right before closing and right after closing a switch, i.e. as the result of flipping the switch Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

  50. t = 0 is iL L R DC Transient Response – DC Steady-State • Find the initial and final current conditions at the inductor is = 10mA Discussion #20 – Exam 2 Review

More Related