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Electrical circuits

A source of electromotive force (e.g., a battery or generator) produces a flow of current in a closed circuit, and this current produces a voltage drop across each resistor, inductor, and capacitor in the circuit. Kirchhoff’s Loop Rule states that the sum of the voltage drops across resistors, inductors, and capacitors is equal to the total electromotive force in a closed circuit. We have the following three results:

  1. The voltage drop across a resistor is given by
    E R = R i ,

    where R is a constant of proportionality called the resistance, and i is the current.
  2. The voltage drop across an inductor is given by
    E L = L i ,

    where L is a constant of proportionality called the inductance , and i again denotes the current.
  3. The voltage drop across a capacitor is given by
    E C = 1 C q ,

where C is a constant of proportionality called the capacitance , and q is the instantaneous charge on the capacitor. The relationship between i and q is i = q .

We use units of volts ( V ) to measure voltage E , amperes ( A ) to measure current i , coulombs ( C ) to measure charge q , ohms ( Ω ) to measure resistance R , henrys ( H ) to measure inductance L , and farads ( F ) to measure capacitance C . Consider the circuit in [link] .

A diagram of an electric circuit in a rectangle. The top has a capacitor C, the left has a voltage generator Vs, the bottom was a resistor R, and the right has an inductor L.
A typical electric circuit, containing a voltage generator ( V S ) , capacitor ( C ) , inductor ( L ) , and resistor ( R ) .

Applying Kirchhoff’s Loop Rule to this circuit, we let E denote the electromotive force supplied by the voltage generator. Then

E L + E R + E C = E .

Substituting the expressions for E L , E R , and E C into this equation, we obtain

L i + R i + 1 C q = E .

If there is no capacitor in the circuit, then the equation becomes

L i + R i = E .

This is a first-order differential equation in i . The circuit is referred to as an L R circuit.

Next, suppose there is no inductor in the circuit, but there is a capacitor and a resistor, so L = 0 , R 0 , and C 0 . Then [link] can be rewritten as

R q + 1 C q = E ,

which is a first-order linear differential equation. This is referred to as an RC circuit . In either case, we can set up and solve an initial-value problem.

Finding current in an RL Electric circuit

A circuit has in series an electromotive force given by E = 50 sin 20 t V , a resistor of 5 Ω , and an inductor of 0.4 H . If the initial current is 0 , find the current at time t > 0 .

We have a resistor and an inductor in the circuit, so we use [link] . The voltage drop across the resistor is given by E R = R i = 5 i . The voltage drop across the inductor is given by E L = L i = 0.4 i . The electromotive force becomes the right-hand side of [link] . Therefore [link] becomes

0.4 i + 5 i = 50 sin 20 t .

Dividing both sides by 0.4 gives the equation

i + 12.5 i = 125 sin 20 t .

Since the initial current is 0, this result gives an initial condition of i ( 0 ) = 0 . We can solve this initial-value problem using the five-step strategy for solving first-order differential equations.

Step 1. Rewrite the differential equation as i + 12.5 i = 125 sin 20 t . This gives p ( t ) = 12.5 and q ( t ) = 125 sin 20 t .

Step 2. The integrating factor is μ ( t ) = e 12.5 d t = e 12.5 t .

Step 3. Multiply the differential equation by μ ( t ) :

e 12.5 t i + 12.5 e 12.5 t i = 125 e 12.5 t sin 20 t d d t [ i e 12.5 t ] = 125 e 12.5 t sin 20 t .

Step 4. Integrate both sides:

d d t [ i e 12.5 t ] d t = 125 e 12.5 t sin 20 t d t i e 12.5 t = ( 250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t 89 ) e 12.5 t + C i ( t ) = 250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t 89 + C e −12.5 t .

Step 5. Solve for C using the initial condition v ( 0 ) = 2 :

i ( t ) = 250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t 89 + C e −12.5 t i ( 0 ) = 250 sin 20 ( 0 ) 400 cos 20 ( 0 ) 89 + C e −12.5 ( 0 ) 0 = 400 89 + C C = 400 89 .

Therefore the solution to the initial-value problem is i ( t ) = 250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t + 400 e −12.5 t 89 = 250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t 89 + 400 e −12.5 t 89 .

The first term can be rewritten as a single cosine function. First, multiply and divide by 250 2 + 400 2 = 50 89 :

250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t 89 = 50 89 89 ( 250 sin 20 t 400 cos 20 t 50 89 ) = 50 89 89 ( 8 cos 20 t 89 5 sin 20 t 89 ) .

Next, define φ to be an acute angle such that cos φ = 8 89 . Then sin φ = 5 89 and

50 89 89 ( 8 cos 20 t 89 5 sin 20 t 89 ) = 50 89 89 ( cos φ cos 20 t sin φ sin 20 t ) = 50 89 89 cos ( 20 t + φ ) .

Therefore the solution can be written as

i ( t ) = 50 89 89 cos ( 20 t + φ ) + 400 e −12.5 t 89 .

The second term is called the attenuation term, because it disappears rapidly as t grows larger. The phase shift is given by φ , and the amplitude of the steady-state current is given by 50 89 89 . The graph of this solution appears in [link] :

A graph of the given solution over [0, 6] on the x axis. It is an oscillating function, rapidly going from just below -5 to just above 5.
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Source:  OpenStax, Calculus volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Feb 05, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11965/1.2
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