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1 AGBell – EECT 111 1 by Andrew G. Bell abell118@ivytech.edu (260) 481-2288 Lecture 3
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2 AGBell – EECT 111 2 PART II Basic Circuit Analysis
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3 AGBell – EECT 111 3 CHAPTER 3 Ohm’s Law
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4 AGBell – EECT 111 4 Relationship of Current to Voltage* A Direct Relationship –An increase in voltage will result in an increase in current. –A decrease in voltage will result in a decrease in current. * Resistance held constant
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5 AGBell – EECT 111 5 Relationship of Current to Resistance* Indirect Relationship –An increase in resistance will result in a decrease in current. –A decrease in resistance will result in an increase in current. * Voltage held constant
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6 AGBell – EECT 111 6 Mathematical Relationship of V, I, and R Formulated with three variables: –V, I, and R Relationship called Ohm’s law Three forms exist:
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7 AGBell – EECT 111 7 The Circuit
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8 AGBell – EECT 111 8 Ohm’s Law Examples Voltage = 25 V Resistance = 25 I = _____
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9 AGBell – EECT 111 9 Ohm’s Law Examples (cont.) Voltage = 15 V Resistance = 1 k I = _______
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10 AGBell – EECT 111 10 Direct and Inverse Relationships Inverse relationship
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11 AGBell – EECT 111 11 Direct and Inverse Relationships (cont.) Direct relationship
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12 AGBell – EECT 111 12 Ohm’s Law Examples Resistance = 50 Current = 2.5 A Voltage = _______
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13 AGBell – EECT 111 13 Ohm’s Law Examples (cont.) Resistance = 10 k Current = 4 mA Voltage = ______
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14 AGBell – EECT 111 14 Ohm’s Law Examples (cont.) Current = 15 mA Voltage = 15 V Resistance = _______
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15 AGBell – EECT 111 15 Ohm’s Law Examples (cont.) Current = 4 mA Voltage = 60 V Resistance = _______
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16 AGBell – EECT 111 16 Current Flow Notations Electron Flow: Flow is from (–) to (+) Conventional Flow*: Flow is from (+) to (–) Polarity: One point in a component or circuit being considered more negative or positive than another *Older notation
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17 AGBell – EECT 111 17 Circuit Representation of Current Flow
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18 AGBell – EECT 111 18 DC Characteristics
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19 AGBell – EECT 111 19 AC Characteristics
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20 AGBell – EECT 111 20 AC Characteristics (cont.)
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21 AGBell – EECT 111 21 Work, Energy and Power Work: Expenditure of energy –Mechanical Work = Force × Distance –Electrical Work = Charge × Voltage Energy: Ability to do work –Energy = Power × Time Power: Rate of energy usage –Power = Energy/Time
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22 AGBell – EECT 111 22 Power and Ohm’s Law Power = Current x Voltage P (watts) = I (amps) x V (voltage) If I = 25 mA and V = 10 V: P = (25 mA) x (10 V) = 250 mW
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23 AGBell – EECT 111 23 Relationships Note that if the current in the last slide doubles, the power will also double. P = IV = (50 mA)(10 V) = 500 mW
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24 AGBell – EECT 111 Power vs. Resistance
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25 AGBell – EECT 111 25 Relationships Between Power and Resistance For a constant resistance: –Doubling the current or voltage will result in a quadrupling of power. –Halving the current or voltage will result in a reduction in power by one-fourth.
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26 AGBell – EECT 111 26 Equation Summary
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27 AGBell – EECT 111 27 Basic Circuit Examples R = 10 k , I = 10 mA, V = _____ V = 100 V V = 50 V, I = 2 mA, R = ______ R = 25 k V = 75 V, R = 10 k , I = ______ I = 7.5 mA
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28 AGBell – EECT 111 28 Power Calculations V = 100 V, I = 2 mA, R = _____, P = _____ R = 50 k , P = 200 mW V = 250 V, R = 25 k , I = _____, P = _____ I = 10 mA, P = 2.5 W
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