30
Fluid flow analogy

Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Fluid flow analogy

Page 2: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 3: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Power and energy in an inductor

Page 4: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 5: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 6: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 7: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Capacitor v-i equation

Page 8: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 9: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 10: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Capacitor Power equation

Page 11: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Capacitor : power and energy

Page 12: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Capacitor : power and energy

Page 13: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

The self- and mutually induced voltages

Page 14: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 15: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

The self- and mutually induced voltages

Page 16: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 17: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

7-1 . The natural response of an RL circuit

• Independent current source IS .

• The switch has been closed for a “long time”.• L di/dt = 0 at t <0 (before the release of stored energy) ;

the inductor appears a s a short circuit .

• No current in R0 and R ; all the current appears in L branch .Finding v(t) and i(t) for t>=0 .

Page 18: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Expressions for the current

LR CircuitsEquations

Page 19: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

RL circuits (cont’d)

Page 20: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

RL circuits (cont’d)

Page 21: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

RL circuits (cont’d)

Page 22: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Time constant

Page 23: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Time constant(1% of the initial value at five time constants)

-less than 5 constants : the transient response- exceeds 5 constants : steady- state response

Page 24: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Time constant (cont’d)

Determination of time constant

Equations (cont’d)

Page 25: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Calculating the response of RL circuit

Page 26: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

7-2 The natural response of an RC circuit

• An RC circuit is analogous to an RL circuit• The switch has been in the position for a long time such

that all the elements in the circuit reach a steady-state condition .

• A source voltage exists between the terminals.• Circuit after switching is shown in Fig. 7-11 .

Page 27: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor

Expression for the voltage

Circuit consisting of R,

C and Vg

Page 28: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 29: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor
Page 30: Fluid flow analogy. Power and energy in an inductor