Week 4a
Week 4a
+ i + i
vs L vs C
Review (Conceptual)
Any first-order circuit can be reduced to a
Thvenin (or Norton) equivalent connected to
either a single equivalent inductor or capacitor.
RTh
+
IN RN L VTh C
t=0 i +
Io Ro L R v
Notation:
0 is used to denote the time just prior to switching
0+ is used to denote the time immediately after switching
The current flowing in the inductor at t = 0 is Io
Solving for the Current (t 0)
For t > 0, the circuit reduces to
i +
Io Ro L R v
( R / L )t
Solution: i(t ) i(0)e = I0e-(R/L)t
Solving for the Voltage (t > 0)
i(t ) I o e+ ( R / L )t
Io Ro L R v
Note that the voltage changes abruptly (step
response):
v (0 ) 0
( R / L ) t
for t > 0, v(t ) iR I o Re
v(0 + ) I0R
Time Constant t
In the example, we found that
i (t ) I o e ( R / L )t and v(t ) I o Re ( R / L )t
L (sec)
t
Define the time constant R
dV
iC
dt
CAPACITORS
+V
|(
C
i(t)
capacitance is defined by
dV
iC So
dV i
dt dt C
Charging a Capacitor with a constant current
+ V(t)
|(
C
i
dV(t) i
dt C
t t
dV(t) i
0 dt dt 0 C dt
voltage
i t
t
i
V(t) dt
0
C C time
Discharging a Capacitor through a resistor
V(t) + i
i C R
d t / t 1 t / t
V (t ) V0e t /t
Since: e e
dt t
Voltage vs time for an RC
discharge
1.2
Voltage 1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0 1 2 3 4
Time
Natural Response of an RC Circuit
Ro t=0
+ +
Vo R
C v
Notation:
0 is used to denote the time just prior to switching
0+ is used to denote the time immediately after switching
The voltage on the capacitor at t = 0 is Vo
Solving for the Voltage (t 0)
For t > 0, the circuit reduces to
i
Ro +
+
Vo C v R
t / RC
Solution: v(t ) v(0)e
Solving for the Current (t > 0)
i
Ro +
+
Vo C v R
v(t ) Vo e t / RC
i (0 ) 0
Note that the current changes abruptly:
v Vo t / RC
for t > 0, i (t ) e
R R
+ Vo
i (0 )
R
Time Constant t
voltage
We compute with pulses
We send beautiful pulses in
time
voltage
But we receive lousy-looking
pulses at the output
time
Vout (t ) Vin + Vout (0) Vin e t /(RC)
Insight
Vout (t ) Vin + Vout (0) Vin et /(RC)
Vout(t) starts at Vout(0) and goes to Vin asymptotically.
The difference between the two values decays exponentially.
The rate of convergence depends on RC. The bigger RC is,
the slower the convergence.
Vout Vout
Vin Vout(0)
bigger RC
Vout(0) Vin
0 0
0 time 0 time
Time Constant
Vout (t ) Vin + Vout (0) Vin et /(RC)
The value RC is called the time constant.
After 1 time constant has passed (t = RC), the above works out to:
Vout (t ) 0.63 Vin + 0.37 Vout (0)
So after 1 time constant, Vout(t) has completed 63% of its transition, with
37% left to go.
After 2 time constants, only 0.372 left to go.
Vout Vout
Vin Vout(0)
.63 V1
.37 Vout(0)
0 0
0 t time 0 t time
R
Vout
Transient vs. +
+
Steady-State Vin
_ I C Vout
_
We can then find x(t0+) using VC(t0+) using KVL or the capacitor I-V
relationship. These laws hold for every instant in time.
Finding the Final Value
To find xf , the asymptotic final value, we assume that the circuit will be in
steady-state as t goes to infinity.
So we assume that the capacitor is acting like an open circuit. We then find the
value of current or voltage we are looking for using this open-circuit
assumption.
Here, we use the circuit after switching along with the open-circuit
assumption.
When we found the initial value, we applied the open-circuit assumption to the
circuit before switching, and found the capacitor voltage which would be
preserved through the switch.
Finding the Time Constant
i +
+
5V vc 10 mF 2 kW
2. Determine the final voltage vc()