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ELL 100 - Introduction to Electrical Engineering
LECTURE 11:
TRANSIENT RESPONSE OF 2ND-ORDER CIRCUITS
(NATURAL RESPONSE)
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
Antennas Can be modeled as RLC circuit
Application of RC/RL/RLC
In-rush current limiters Electrical circuit breakers
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
Electronic oscillators/clock circuits
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
Lightning arresters
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
Surge arrester Line trap circuit
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
Electric Fan Ceiling fan wiring diagram
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
Tube light RL choke coil
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
RLC projector lamp Electric light dimmer
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC
LCR meters
INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
Application of RC/RL/RLC: Electronic Filters
High-pass RC High-pass RL Series RLC Band-pass
Low-Pass RL Filters Wide-Band Band-Pass Filters
INTRODUCTION
12
• This lecture deals with the RLC circuits containing both an inductor
and a capacitor, which are 2nd-order circuits
• 2nd-order circuit responses are described by 2nd-order differential
equations (containing a double derivative w.r.t time).
• The response of RLC circuits with DC sources and switches consist of
a natural response and a forced response:
v(t) = vf (t)+vn (t)
• The complete response must satisfy both the initial conditions and the
final conditions of the forced response.
BASIC CONCEPTS
13
Finding initial and final values
• Objective: Find v(0), i(0), dv(0)/dt, di(0)/dt, i(∞), v(∞)
• Two key points: (a) The direction of the current i(t)
(b) the polarity of voltage v(t).
• v and i are defined according to the passive sign convention.
BASIC CONCEPTS
14
• The capacitor voltage is always continuous:
v(0+) = v(0-)
• The inductor current is always continuous:
i(0+) = i(0-)
Learning objectives:
• Determine the natural responses of parallel and series RLC circuits.
• To understand the initial conditions in an RLC circuit and use them
to determine the expansion coefficients of the complete solution.
• What do the response curves of over, under, and critically-damped
circuits look like? How to choose R, L, C values to achieve
fast switching or to prevent overshooting damage.
15
Problem 1: The switch was closed for a long time and opened at t = 0.
Find: (a) i(0+), v(0+), (b) di(0+) ∕dt, dv(0+) ∕dt, (c) i(∞), v(∞).
16
i(0-) = (12)/(4 + 2) = 2 A, v(0-) = 2i(0-) = 4 V
(a) t = 0- (b) t = 0+ (c) t → ∞
As the inductor current and the capacitor voltage cannot change abruptly,
i(0+) = i(0-) = 2 A, v(0+) = v(0-) = 4 V
At t = 0+, the switch is open, same current flows through both the inductor
and capacitor. Hence, iC(0+) = i(0+) = 2 A
17
Since,
Also,
vL is obtained by applying KVL in the loop,
−12 + 4i(0+) + vL(0+) + v(0+) = 0
=> vL(0+) = 12 − 8 − 4 = 0
=>
;
(0 )
(0 ) 2
20V/s
0.1
c
c
c
i
dv dv
i C
dt dt C
i
dv
dt C


 
  
; L
L
v
di di
v L
dt dt L
 
(0 )
(0 ) 0
0A/s
0.25
L
v
di
dt L


  
t = 0+
18
For t > 0,
• The circuit first undergoes through some transients.
• As t → ∞, the circuit reaches steady state again.
The inductor acts like a short circuit and the
capacitor like an open circuit.
i(∞) = 0 A, v(∞) = 12 V
t → ∞
THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
19
Consider the given series RLC circuit,
• The circuit is being excited by the
energy initially stored in the
capacitor and inductor.
• The energy is represented by the
initial capacitor voltage V0 and
initial inductor current I0.
• Thus, at t = 0,
0
0
0
1
(0)
(0)
v i dt V
C
i I

 


20
On applying KVL,
This is a second-order differential equation for the current i in the circuit.
The initial values and the first derivative are related as,
THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
2
2
1
( ) 0
on differentiating,
0
t
di
Ri L i d
dt C
d i R di i
dt L dt LC
 

  
  

0 0 0
(0) (0) 1
(0) 0; ( )
di di
Ri L V RI V
dt dt L
     
21
Look for solutions of the form i = Aest where, A and s are constants.
Substitute this into differential equation,
Thus,
This quadratic equation is known as the characteristic equation
THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
2
2
0
1
0
st
st st
st
AR Ase
As e se
L LC
R
Ae s s
L LC
  
 
  
 
 
2 1
0
R
s s
L LC
  
22
The roots of the equation dictate the character of i and they are given as,
A more compact way of expressing the roots is,
where,
2
1
2
2
1
2 2
1
2 2
R R
s
L L LC
R R
s
L L LC
 
   
 
 
 
   
 
 
2 2
1 0
2 2
2 0
s
s
  
  
   
   
0
1
;
2
R
L LC
 
  SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
23
• The roots s1 and s2 are called natural frequencies, measured in
nepers per second (Np/s), because they are associated with the
natural response of the circuit
• ω0 is known as the resonant frequency or strictly as the undamped
natural frequency, expressed in radians per second (rad/s);
• α is the neper frequency (or damping constant) expressed in
nepers per second.
The expression given is modified in terms of α and ω0,
THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
2
2 2
0
1
0
2 0
R
s s
L LC
s s
 
  
  
24
The two values of s indicate that there are two possible solutions for i,
• A complete or total solution would therefore require a linear
combination of i1 and i2.
• Thus, the natural response of the series RLC circuit is
where the constants A1 and A2 are determined from the initial values
i(0) and di(0) ∕dt.
Three types of solutions are inferred:
1. If α > ω0, we have the over-damped case.
2. If α = ω0, we have the critically-damped case.
3. If α < ω0, we have the under-damped case.
THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
1 2
1 1 2 2
;
s t s t
i Ae i A e
 
1 2
1 2
( ) s t s t
i t Ae A e
 
• Overdamped Case (α > ω0)
α > ω0 implies R2 > 4L ∕ C
When this happens, both roots s1 and s2 are negative and real.
The response is given as,
Overdamped response
25
1 2
1 2
( ) s t s t
i t Ae A e
 
2 2
1 0
2 2
2 0
s
s
  
  
   
   
0
1
;
2
R
L LC
 
 
26
• Critically Damped Case (α = ω0)
α = ω0 implies R2 = 4L ∕ C Thus
For this case,
where A3 = A1 + A2 . But this cannot be the solution, because the two
initial conditions cannot be satisfied with the single constant A3.
When α = ω0 = R ∕ 2L, then
1 2
2
R
s s
L

    
1 2 3
( ) t t t
i t Ae A e A e
  
  
  
2
2
2
2 0
0
d i di
i
dt dt
d di di
i i
dt dt dt
 
  
  
   
   
   
   
let, , then,
0
di
f i
dt
df
f
dt


 
 
this is a first-order differential
equation with solution f = A1e−αt,
where A1 is a constant.
27
The original equation for current i becomes,
 
1
1 1
1 2 1 2
;
on integration,
; ( )
t
t t t
t t
di
i Ae
dt
di d
e e i A e i A
dt dt
e i At A i At A e

  
 




 
  
   
Hence, the natural response of the critically damped circuit is a sum of
two terms: a negative exponential and a negative exponential multiplied
by a linear term.
Critically-damped response
28
• Underdamped Case (α < ω0)
α < ω0 implies R2 < 4L ∕ C. The roots may be written as,
where,
Both ω0 and ωd are natural frequencies because they help determine the
natural response; while ω0 is called the undamped natural frequency,
ωd is called the damped natural frequency. The natural response is
2 2
1 0
2 2
2 0
( )
( )
d
d
s j
s j
    
    
       
       
2 2
0
1; d
j   
   
( ) ( )
1 2
1 2
( )
(
d d
d d
j t j t
j t j t
t
i t Ae A e
e Ae A e
   
 

   
 

 
  )
29
By using Euler’s identities,
Note:
It is clear that the natural response for this case is exponentially damped
but also oscillatory in nature. The response has a time constant of 1/α and
a period of T = 2π/ωd.
1 2
1 2 1 2
1 2
( ) [ (cos sin ) (cos sin )]
[( )cos ( )sin ]
( ) [ cos sin ]
t
d d d d
t
d d
t
d d
i t e A t j t A t j t
e A A t j A A t
i t e B t B t



   
 
 



   
   
 
Under-damped response
30
Conclusions:
(i) The damping effect is due to the presence of resistance R.
• The damping factor α determines the rate at which the response is
damped.
• If R = 0, then α = 0 and we have an LC circuit with as the
undamped natural frequency. The response in such a case is
undamped and purely oscillatory.
• The circuit is said to be lossless because the dissipating or damping
element (R) is absent.
• By adjusting the value of R, the response may be made undamped,
overdamped, critically damped or underdamped.
1/ LC
31
Conclusions:
(ii) Oscillatory response is possible due to the presence L and C.
• The damped oscillation exhibited by the underdamped response is
known as ringing. It stems from the ability of the storage elements
L and C to transfer energy back and forth between them.
(iii) The overdamped has the longest settling time because it takes the
longest time to dissipate the initial stored energy.
• If we desire the fastest response without oscillation or ringing, the
critically damped circuit is the right choice.
32
Problem 2: For the given circuit, R= 40 Ω, L = 4 H, and C = 1/4 F.
Calculate the characteristic roots of the circuit. Is the natural response
overdamped, underdamped, or critically damped?
2
1
2
2
5 5 1
5 5 1
s
s
   
   
33
The roots are,
s1 = -0.101; s2 = -9.899
Since α > ω0, we conclude that the
response is overdamped.
This is also evident from the fact that
the roots are real and negative.
2 2
1 0
2 2
2 0
s
s
  
  
   
   
0
1
5; 1
2
R
L LC
 
   
R= 40 Ω, L = 4 H, C = 1/4 F =>
34
Problem 3: Find i(t) for t > 0. Assume that the circuit has reached
steady state before the switch is opened.
35
Solution:
(a) for t < 0 (b) for t > 0.
Under-damped response
10
(0) 1A; (0) 6 (0) 6V
4 6
i v i
   

0
1
9; 10
2
R
L LC
 
   
2
1
2
2
1,2
9 9 100
9 9 100
9 4.359
s
s
s j
   
   
  
36
Hence,
A1 and A2 are found using the initial conditions.
At t = 0, i(0) = 1 = A1
9
1 2
( ) [ (cos4.359 ) (sin 4.359 )]
t
i t e A t A t

 
0
9
1 2
9
1 2
1
[ (0) (0)] 6 /
Taking the derivative of ( )
9 [ (cos4.359 ) (sin 4.359 )]
(4.359)[ (sin 4.359 ) (cos4.359 )]
t
t
t
di
Ri v A s
dt L
i t
di
e A t A t
dt
e A t A t



    
  
  
t > 0
37
Substituting the values of A1 and A2 yields the complete solution as,
for t > 0
1 2
1
2
2
6 9( 0) 4.359( 0 )
substituting 1,
6 9 4.359
0.6882
Α A
Α
A
A
      

   
 
9
( ) [(cos4.359 ) 0.6882(sin 4.359 )]A
t
i t e t t

 
38
• Assume initial inductor current I0 and
initial capacitor voltage V0,
• Three elements are in parallel, they
have the same voltage v across them.
• Applying KCL at the top node gives,
THE SOURCE-FREE PARALLEL RLC CIRCUIT
0
0
0
1
(0) ( )
(0)
i I v t dt
L
v V

 


0
1
( ) 0
v dv
v d C
R L dt
 

  

39
Taking another derivative w.r.t ‘t’,
The characteristic equation is given as,
THE SOURCE-FREE PARALLEL RLC CIRCUIT
2
2
1 1
0
d v dv
v
dt RC dt LC
  
2
2
1,2
2 2
1,2 0 0
1 1
0
Roots of the characteristic equation are,
1 1 1
2 2
1 1
, ,
2
s s
RC LC
s
RC RC LC
s
RC LC
    
  
 
  
 
 
     
40
1 2
1 2
( ) s t s t
v t Ae A e
 
1 2
( ) ( t) t
v t A A e 

 
2 2
1,2 0
1 2
;
v( ) ( cos sin )
d d
t
d d
s j
t e A t A t

    
 

    
 
• Overdamped Case (α > ω0)
α > ω0 => L/C > 4R2. The roots of the characteristic equation are real
and negative. The response is,
• Critically Damped Case (α = ω0)
α = ω0 => L/C = 4R2. The roots are real and equal so that the
response is,
• Underdamped Case (α < ω0)
α < ω0 => L/C < 4R2. In this case the roots are complex conjugates
expressed as
41
• The constants A1 and A2 in each case can be determined from the
initial conditions i.e. v(0) and dv(0) ∕dt
0
0
0 0
(0)
0
(V )
(0)
V dv
I C
R dt
RI
dv
dt RC
  

 
42
Problem 4: In the given parallel circuit, find v(t) for t > 0, assuming
v(0) = 5 V, i(0) = 0, L = 1 H, and C = 10 mF.
Consider three cases: 1) R = 1.923 Ω, 2) R = 5 Ω, and 3) R = 6.25 Ω.
Solution: Case 1: R = 1.923 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF
2 2
1 0
2 2
2 0
2 50
1 2
( )
Applying intial conditions,
2
50
t t
s
s
v t Ae A e
  
  
 
 
     
     
43
3
0 3
1 1
26;
2 2 1.923 10 10
1 1
10
1 10 10
RC
LC




  
  
  
 
Since α > ω0, the response is overdamped.
The roots of the characteristic equation are
44
2 2
1 0
2 2
2 0
2 50
1 2
1 2
2 50
1 2
( )
Applying intial conditions,
v(
2
50
(0) (0) (0)
260
on differentiating
0)=5=
,
2 50
t t
t t
s
s
dv v Ri
v t Ae A
dt RC
d
e
A A
Ae A e
v
dt
  
  
 
 
 
     
     



 


 
1 2
1 2
2 50
at 0, -260=-2 50
The obtained values are,
0.2083, 5.208
( ) 0.2083 5.208
t t
t A A
A A
v t e e
 
 
  
  
Case 1:
R = 1.923 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF
45
CASE 2: R = 5 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF
The response is critically-damped.
3
0 3
1 1
10;
2 2 5 10 10
1 1
10
1 10 10
RC
LC




  
  
  
 
1 2
( ) ( t) t
v t A A e 

 
Applying intial conditions,
1
10
1 2 2
1 2
10
v(0)=5=
( 10 1
(0) (0)
0 )
at
(0)
100
o
0, -100=-10
The obtained values are,
( ) (5 50
n differentiating,
)
t
t
A
A A t A e
t A A
v t t e
dv v Ri
dt RC
V
dv
dt


   

   
 
 
46
CASE 3: R = 6.25 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF
The response is underdamped.
Obtain A1 and A2 from initial conditions:
3
0 3
1 1
8;
2 2 6.25 10 10
1 1
10
1 10 10
RC
LC




  
  
  
 
1,2
8
1 2
8 6
v( ) ( cos6 sin 6 )
d
t
s j j
t e A t A t
 

     
 
1
(0)
v(0)
(0) (0)
=
80
=5
dv v Ri
dt C
A
R

   
1 2
1 2
8
at 0, -80=-8 6
5; 6.667
( ) (5cos6 6.667sin 6 ) t
t A A
A A
v t t t e V

 
  
 
47
Problem 5: Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit. Assume
that the switch has been open for a long time before closing.
48
Solution:
• For t < 0, the switch
is open.
• Inductor acts like a
short circuit,
capacitor behaves
like an open circuit.
• The initial voltage
across the capacitor
is the same as the
voltage across the
50-Ω resistor.
50
(0) (40) 25;
30 50
40
(0) 0.5
30 50
v
i A
 

  

(0) (0) (0)
0
dv v Ri
dt RC

  
49
For t > 0, the switch is
closed. The voltage source
along with the 30-Ω resistor
is separated from the rest of
the circuit.
Since α > ω0, we have the
overdamped response.
6
0
1 1
500;
2 2 50 20 10
1
354
RC
LC



  
  
 
2 2
1,2 0
1 2
500 354
854; 146
s
s s
  
      
   
854 146
1 2
( ) t t
v t Ae A e
 
 
50
1 2
854 146
1 2
on differentiating,
Applying intial conditions,
v(0)=25=
854 146
t t
d
A A
Ae A e
v
dt
 

   
1 2
1 2
(0)
0 854 146
5.156; 30.16
dv
A A
dt
A A
   
  
854 146
( ) 5.156 30.16
t t
v t e e V
 
  
Thus, the complete solution is given as,
51
Problem 6:For the circuit, find:
(a) i(0+) and v(0+),
(b) di(0+) ∕ dt and dv(0+) ∕ dt,
(c) i(∞) and v(∞)
Ans: (a) i(0+)= 2A, v(0+)=12V
(b) di(0+) ∕ dt = -4A/s, dv(0+) ∕ dt= -5V/s
(c) i(∞)=0A, v(∞)=0V
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Finding Initial and Final Values
52
Problem 7: Refer to the circuit. Calculate:
(a) iL(0+), vC(0+), and vR(0+)
(b) diL(0+) ∕dt, dvC(0+) ∕dt, and dvR(0+) ∕dt
(c) iL(∞), vC(∞), and vR(∞).
Ans: (a) iL(0+)=0A, vC(0+)=-10V, vR(0+)=0V
(b) diL(0+) ∕dt= 0A/s ,dvC(0+) ∕dt=8V/s, dvR(0+) ∕dt=8V/s
(c) iL(∞)=400mA, vC(∞)=6V, = vR(∞)=16V
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
53
Problem 8:Refer to the circuit. Determine:
(a) i(0+) and v(0+)
(b) di ∕(0+)dt and dv(0+) ∕dt
(c) i(∞) and v(∞).
Ans: (a) i(0+) = 0A ,v(0+) = 0V
(b) di ∕(0+)dt = 4A/s, dv(0+) ∕dt =0V/s
(c) i(∞) = 2.4A, v(∞) = 9.6V
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
54
Problem 9: In the circuit, find:
(a) vR(0+) and vL(0+)
(b) dvR(0+) ∕dt and dvL(0+) ∕dt
(c) vR(∞) and vL(∞)
Ans: (a) vR(0+) =0V , vL(0+) =0V
(b) dvR(0+) ∕dt =0V/s , dvL(0+) ∕dt = Vs/(CRs)
(c) vR(∞) = [R/(R + Rs)]Vs, vL(∞) =0V
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
55
Source-Free Series RLC Circuit
Problem 10: The current in an RLC circuit is described by
If i(0) = 10 A and di(0) ∕dt = 0, find i(t) for t > 0.
Problem 11: The natural response of an RLC circuit is described by the
differential equation,
for which the initial conditions are v(0) = 10 V and dv(0) ∕dt = 0. Solve for
v(t).
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
2
2
10 25 0
d i di
i
dt dt
  
2
2
2 0
d v dv
v
dt dt
  
Ans: i(t) = [(10 + 50t)e-5t] A
Ans: v(t) = [(10 + 10t)e-t] V
56
Problem 12: The switch moves from position A to position B at t = 0
(please note that the switch must connect to point B before it breaks the
connection at A, a make-before-break switch). Let v(0) = 0, find v(t) for t
> 0.
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Ans: v(t) =5.333e–2t–5.333e–0.5t V
57
Problem 13: In the circuit, the switch instantaneously moves from
position A to B at t = 0. Find v(t) for all t ≥ 0.
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Ans: v(t) = [21.55e-2.679t – 1.55e-37.32t] V
58
Problem 14: The switch in the circuit has been closed for a long time but
is opened at t = 0. Determine i(t) for t > 0.
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Ans: i(t) = (15cos(2t) + 15sin(2t))e-2t A
59
Source-Free Parallel RLC Circuit
Problem 15: For the network, what value of C is needed to make the
response underdamped with unity neper frequency (α = 1)?
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Ans: C = 40 mF
60
Problem 16: The switch moves from position A to position B at t = 0
(please note that the switch must connect to point B before it breaks the
connection at A, a make-before-break switch). Determine i(t) for t > 0.
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
Ans: i(t) = e–5t[4cos(19.365t) + 1.0328sin(19.365t)] A
61
Problem 17: A source free RLC has R= 1Ω, C=1nF and L= 1pF.
Calculate (a) calculate α and ω0
(b) s1and s2
(c)What is the form of inductor current response for t>0.
Ans: (a) α =5x108 s-1 , ω0=3.16x1013 rad/s
(b) s1and s2=
(c) The circuit is underdamped since α <ω0
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
9 21 18
0.5 10 10 (0.25)(10 )
j
   
62
Problem 18:Assuming R=2kΩ, design a parallel RLC circuit that has the
characteristic equation
Ans: L=20H, C=50nF
Problem 19: Calculate io(t) and vo(t) for t > 0.
EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
2 6
100 10 0
s s
  
Ans: vo(t) =(24cos1.9843t + 3.024sin1.9843t)e-t/4 V
io(t) =[– 12.095sin1.9843t]e–t/4 A.
REFERENCES
63
[1] Charles K. Alexander and Matthew N. O. Sadiku,
“Fundamentals of Electric Circuits”, 6th Ed., McGraw Hill,
Indian Edition, 2013.
[2] William H. Hayt, Jr., Jack E. Kemmerly, Steven M.
Durbin, “Engineering Circuit Analysis” 8th Ed., McGraw-
Hill, New York, 2012.
THANK YOU

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L11_VV (1).pdf

  • 1. ELL 100 - Introduction to Electrical Engineering LECTURE 11: TRANSIENT RESPONSE OF 2ND-ORDER CIRCUITS (NATURAL RESPONSE)
  • 2. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC Antennas Can be modeled as RLC circuit
  • 3. Application of RC/RL/RLC In-rush current limiters Electrical circuit breakers INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS
  • 4. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC Electronic oscillators/clock circuits
  • 5. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC Lightning arresters
  • 6. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC Surge arrester Line trap circuit
  • 7. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC Electric Fan Ceiling fan wiring diagram
  • 8. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC Tube light RL choke coil
  • 9. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC RLC projector lamp Electric light dimmer
  • 10. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC LCR meters
  • 11. INSIGHT AND REAL LIFE APPLICATIONS Application of RC/RL/RLC: Electronic Filters High-pass RC High-pass RL Series RLC Band-pass Low-Pass RL Filters Wide-Band Band-Pass Filters
  • 12. INTRODUCTION 12 • This lecture deals with the RLC circuits containing both an inductor and a capacitor, which are 2nd-order circuits • 2nd-order circuit responses are described by 2nd-order differential equations (containing a double derivative w.r.t time). • The response of RLC circuits with DC sources and switches consist of a natural response and a forced response: v(t) = vf (t)+vn (t) • The complete response must satisfy both the initial conditions and the final conditions of the forced response.
  • 13. BASIC CONCEPTS 13 Finding initial and final values • Objective: Find v(0), i(0), dv(0)/dt, di(0)/dt, i(∞), v(∞) • Two key points: (a) The direction of the current i(t) (b) the polarity of voltage v(t). • v and i are defined according to the passive sign convention.
  • 14. BASIC CONCEPTS 14 • The capacitor voltage is always continuous: v(0+) = v(0-) • The inductor current is always continuous: i(0+) = i(0-) Learning objectives: • Determine the natural responses of parallel and series RLC circuits. • To understand the initial conditions in an RLC circuit and use them to determine the expansion coefficients of the complete solution. • What do the response curves of over, under, and critically-damped circuits look like? How to choose R, L, C values to achieve fast switching or to prevent overshooting damage.
  • 15. 15 Problem 1: The switch was closed for a long time and opened at t = 0. Find: (a) i(0+), v(0+), (b) di(0+) ∕dt, dv(0+) ∕dt, (c) i(∞), v(∞).
  • 16. 16 i(0-) = (12)/(4 + 2) = 2 A, v(0-) = 2i(0-) = 4 V (a) t = 0- (b) t = 0+ (c) t → ∞ As the inductor current and the capacitor voltage cannot change abruptly, i(0+) = i(0-) = 2 A, v(0+) = v(0-) = 4 V At t = 0+, the switch is open, same current flows through both the inductor and capacitor. Hence, iC(0+) = i(0+) = 2 A
  • 17. 17 Since, Also, vL is obtained by applying KVL in the loop, −12 + 4i(0+) + vL(0+) + v(0+) = 0 => vL(0+) = 12 − 8 − 4 = 0 => ; (0 ) (0 ) 2 20V/s 0.1 c c c i dv dv i C dt dt C i dv dt C        ; L L v di di v L dt dt L   (0 ) (0 ) 0 0A/s 0.25 L v di dt L      t = 0+
  • 18. 18 For t > 0, • The circuit first undergoes through some transients. • As t → ∞, the circuit reaches steady state again. The inductor acts like a short circuit and the capacitor like an open circuit. i(∞) = 0 A, v(∞) = 12 V t → ∞
  • 19. THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT 19 Consider the given series RLC circuit, • The circuit is being excited by the energy initially stored in the capacitor and inductor. • The energy is represented by the initial capacitor voltage V0 and initial inductor current I0. • Thus, at t = 0, 0 0 0 1 (0) (0) v i dt V C i I     
  • 20. 20 On applying KVL, This is a second-order differential equation for the current i in the circuit. The initial values and the first derivative are related as, THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT 2 2 1 ( ) 0 on differentiating, 0 t di Ri L i d dt C d i R di i dt L dt LC           0 0 0 (0) (0) 1 (0) 0; ( ) di di Ri L V RI V dt dt L      
  • 21. 21 Look for solutions of the form i = Aest where, A and s are constants. Substitute this into differential equation, Thus, This quadratic equation is known as the characteristic equation THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT 2 2 0 1 0 st st st st AR Ase As e se L LC R Ae s s L LC             2 1 0 R s s L LC   
  • 22. 22 The roots of the equation dictate the character of i and they are given as, A more compact way of expressing the roots is, where, 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 R R s L L LC R R s L L LC                     2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 s s               0 1 ; 2 R L LC     SERIES RLC CIRCUIT
  • 23. 23 • The roots s1 and s2 are called natural frequencies, measured in nepers per second (Np/s), because they are associated with the natural response of the circuit • ω0 is known as the resonant frequency or strictly as the undamped natural frequency, expressed in radians per second (rad/s); • α is the neper frequency (or damping constant) expressed in nepers per second. The expression given is modified in terms of α and ω0, THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT 2 2 2 0 1 0 2 0 R s s L LC s s        
  • 24. 24 The two values of s indicate that there are two possible solutions for i, • A complete or total solution would therefore require a linear combination of i1 and i2. • Thus, the natural response of the series RLC circuit is where the constants A1 and A2 are determined from the initial values i(0) and di(0) ∕dt. Three types of solutions are inferred: 1. If α > ω0, we have the over-damped case. 2. If α = ω0, we have the critically-damped case. 3. If α < ω0, we have the under-damped case. THE SOURCE-FREE SERIES RLC CIRCUIT 1 2 1 1 2 2 ; s t s t i Ae i A e   1 2 1 2 ( ) s t s t i t Ae A e  
  • 25. • Overdamped Case (α > ω0) α > ω0 implies R2 > 4L ∕ C When this happens, both roots s1 and s2 are negative and real. The response is given as, Overdamped response 25 1 2 1 2 ( ) s t s t i t Ae A e   2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 s s               0 1 ; 2 R L LC    
  • 26. 26 • Critically Damped Case (α = ω0) α = ω0 implies R2 = 4L ∕ C Thus For this case, where A3 = A1 + A2 . But this cannot be the solution, because the two initial conditions cannot be satisfied with the single constant A3. When α = ω0 = R ∕ 2L, then 1 2 2 R s s L       1 2 3 ( ) t t t i t Ae A e A e          2 2 2 2 0 0 d i di i dt dt d di di i i dt dt dt                         let, , then, 0 di f i dt df f dt       this is a first-order differential equation with solution f = A1e−αt, where A1 is a constant.
  • 27. 27 The original equation for current i becomes,   1 1 1 1 2 1 2 ; on integration, ; ( ) t t t t t t di i Ae dt di d e e i A e i A dt dt e i At A i At A e                    Hence, the natural response of the critically damped circuit is a sum of two terms: a negative exponential and a negative exponential multiplied by a linear term. Critically-damped response
  • 28. 28 • Underdamped Case (α < ω0) α < ω0 implies R2 < 4L ∕ C. The roots may be written as, where, Both ω0 and ωd are natural frequencies because they help determine the natural response; while ω0 is called the undamped natural frequency, ωd is called the damped natural frequency. The natural response is 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 ( ) ( ) d d s j s j                           2 2 0 1; d j        ( ) ( ) 1 2 1 2 ( ) ( d d d d j t j t j t j t t i t Ae A e e Ae A e                   )
  • 29. 29 By using Euler’s identities, Note: It is clear that the natural response for this case is exponentially damped but also oscillatory in nature. The response has a time constant of 1/α and a period of T = 2π/ωd. 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 ( ) [ (cos sin ) (cos sin )] [( )cos ( )sin ] ( ) [ cos sin ] t d d d d t d d t d d i t e A t j t A t j t e A A t j A A t i t e B t B t                         Under-damped response
  • 30. 30 Conclusions: (i) The damping effect is due to the presence of resistance R. • The damping factor α determines the rate at which the response is damped. • If R = 0, then α = 0 and we have an LC circuit with as the undamped natural frequency. The response in such a case is undamped and purely oscillatory. • The circuit is said to be lossless because the dissipating or damping element (R) is absent. • By adjusting the value of R, the response may be made undamped, overdamped, critically damped or underdamped. 1/ LC
  • 31. 31 Conclusions: (ii) Oscillatory response is possible due to the presence L and C. • The damped oscillation exhibited by the underdamped response is known as ringing. It stems from the ability of the storage elements L and C to transfer energy back and forth between them. (iii) The overdamped has the longest settling time because it takes the longest time to dissipate the initial stored energy. • If we desire the fastest response without oscillation or ringing, the critically damped circuit is the right choice.
  • 32. 32 Problem 2: For the given circuit, R= 40 Ω, L = 4 H, and C = 1/4 F. Calculate the characteristic roots of the circuit. Is the natural response overdamped, underdamped, or critically damped?
  • 33. 2 1 2 2 5 5 1 5 5 1 s s         33 The roots are, s1 = -0.101; s2 = -9.899 Since α > ω0, we conclude that the response is overdamped. This is also evident from the fact that the roots are real and negative. 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 s s               0 1 5; 1 2 R L LC       R= 40 Ω, L = 4 H, C = 1/4 F =>
  • 34. 34 Problem 3: Find i(t) for t > 0. Assume that the circuit has reached steady state before the switch is opened.
  • 35. 35 Solution: (a) for t < 0 (b) for t > 0. Under-damped response 10 (0) 1A; (0) 6 (0) 6V 4 6 i v i      0 1 9; 10 2 R L LC       2 1 2 2 1,2 9 9 100 9 9 100 9 4.359 s s s j           
  • 36. 36 Hence, A1 and A2 are found using the initial conditions. At t = 0, i(0) = 1 = A1 9 1 2 ( ) [ (cos4.359 ) (sin 4.359 )] t i t e A t A t    0 9 1 2 9 1 2 1 [ (0) (0)] 6 / Taking the derivative of ( ) 9 [ (cos4.359 ) (sin 4.359 )] (4.359)[ (sin 4.359 ) (cos4.359 )] t t t di Ri v A s dt L i t di e A t A t dt e A t A t               t > 0
  • 37. 37 Substituting the values of A1 and A2 yields the complete solution as, for t > 0 1 2 1 2 2 6 9( 0) 4.359( 0 ) substituting 1, 6 9 4.359 0.6882 Α A Α A A               9 ( ) [(cos4.359 ) 0.6882(sin 4.359 )]A t i t e t t   
  • 38. 38 • Assume initial inductor current I0 and initial capacitor voltage V0, • Three elements are in parallel, they have the same voltage v across them. • Applying KCL at the top node gives, THE SOURCE-FREE PARALLEL RLC CIRCUIT 0 0 0 1 (0) ( ) (0) i I v t dt L v V      0 1 ( ) 0 v dv v d C R L dt       
  • 39. 39 Taking another derivative w.r.t ‘t’, The characteristic equation is given as, THE SOURCE-FREE PARALLEL RLC CIRCUIT 2 2 1 1 0 d v dv v dt RC dt LC    2 2 1,2 2 2 1,2 0 0 1 1 0 Roots of the characteristic equation are, 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 , , 2 s s RC LC s RC RC LC s RC LC                       
  • 40. 40 1 2 1 2 ( ) s t s t v t Ae A e   1 2 ( ) ( t) t v t A A e     2 2 1,2 0 1 2 ; v( ) ( cos sin ) d d t d d s j t e A t A t                 • Overdamped Case (α > ω0) α > ω0 => L/C > 4R2. The roots of the characteristic equation are real and negative. The response is, • Critically Damped Case (α = ω0) α = ω0 => L/C = 4R2. The roots are real and equal so that the response is, • Underdamped Case (α < ω0) α < ω0 => L/C < 4R2. In this case the roots are complex conjugates expressed as
  • 41. 41 • The constants A1 and A2 in each case can be determined from the initial conditions i.e. v(0) and dv(0) ∕dt 0 0 0 0 (0) 0 (V ) (0) V dv I C R dt RI dv dt RC      
  • 42. 42 Problem 4: In the given parallel circuit, find v(t) for t > 0, assuming v(0) = 5 V, i(0) = 0, L = 1 H, and C = 10 mF. Consider three cases: 1) R = 1.923 Ω, 2) R = 5 Ω, and 3) R = 6.25 Ω.
  • 43. Solution: Case 1: R = 1.923 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 2 50 1 2 ( ) Applying intial conditions, 2 50 t t s s v t Ae A e                       43 3 0 3 1 1 26; 2 2 1.923 10 10 1 1 10 1 10 10 RC LC                Since α > ω0, the response is overdamped. The roots of the characteristic equation are
  • 44. 44 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 2 50 1 2 1 2 2 50 1 2 ( ) Applying intial conditions, v( 2 50 (0) (0) (0) 260 on differentiating 0)=5= , 2 50 t t t t s s dv v Ri v t Ae A dt RC d e A A Ae A e v dt                                  1 2 1 2 2 50 at 0, -260=-2 50 The obtained values are, 0.2083, 5.208 ( ) 0.2083 5.208 t t t A A A A v t e e           Case 1: R = 1.923 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF
  • 45. 45 CASE 2: R = 5 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF The response is critically-damped. 3 0 3 1 1 10; 2 2 5 10 10 1 1 10 1 10 10 RC LC                1 2 ( ) ( t) t v t A A e     Applying intial conditions, 1 10 1 2 2 1 2 10 v(0)=5= ( 10 1 (0) (0) 0 ) at (0) 100 o 0, -100=-10 The obtained values are, ( ) (5 50 n differentiating, ) t t A A A t A e t A A v t t e dv v Ri dt RC V dv dt               
  • 46. 46 CASE 3: R = 6.25 Ω, L = 1 H, C = 10 mF The response is underdamped. Obtain A1 and A2 from initial conditions: 3 0 3 1 1 8; 2 2 6.25 10 10 1 1 10 1 10 10 RC LC                1,2 8 1 2 8 6 v( ) ( cos6 sin 6 ) d t s j j t e A t A t            1 (0) v(0) (0) (0) = 80 =5 dv v Ri dt C A R      1 2 1 2 8 at 0, -80=-8 6 5; 6.667 ( ) (5cos6 6.667sin 6 ) t t A A A A v t t t e V        
  • 47. 47 Problem 5: Find v(t) for t > 0 in the RLC circuit. Assume that the switch has been open for a long time before closing.
  • 48. 48 Solution: • For t < 0, the switch is open. • Inductor acts like a short circuit, capacitor behaves like an open circuit. • The initial voltage across the capacitor is the same as the voltage across the 50-Ω resistor. 50 (0) (40) 25; 30 50 40 (0) 0.5 30 50 v i A        (0) (0) (0) 0 dv v Ri dt RC    
  • 49. 49 For t > 0, the switch is closed. The voltage source along with the 30-Ω resistor is separated from the rest of the circuit. Since α > ω0, we have the overdamped response. 6 0 1 1 500; 2 2 50 20 10 1 354 RC LC            2 2 1,2 0 1 2 500 354 854; 146 s s s               854 146 1 2 ( ) t t v t Ae A e    
  • 50. 50 1 2 854 146 1 2 on differentiating, Applying intial conditions, v(0)=25= 854 146 t t d A A Ae A e v dt        1 2 1 2 (0) 0 854 146 5.156; 30.16 dv A A dt A A        854 146 ( ) 5.156 30.16 t t v t e e V      Thus, the complete solution is given as,
  • 51. 51 Problem 6:For the circuit, find: (a) i(0+) and v(0+), (b) di(0+) ∕ dt and dv(0+) ∕ dt, (c) i(∞) and v(∞) Ans: (a) i(0+)= 2A, v(0+)=12V (b) di(0+) ∕ dt = -4A/s, dv(0+) ∕ dt= -5V/s (c) i(∞)=0A, v(∞)=0V EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES Finding Initial and Final Values
  • 52. 52 Problem 7: Refer to the circuit. Calculate: (a) iL(0+), vC(0+), and vR(0+) (b) diL(0+) ∕dt, dvC(0+) ∕dt, and dvR(0+) ∕dt (c) iL(∞), vC(∞), and vR(∞). Ans: (a) iL(0+)=0A, vC(0+)=-10V, vR(0+)=0V (b) diL(0+) ∕dt= 0A/s ,dvC(0+) ∕dt=8V/s, dvR(0+) ∕dt=8V/s (c) iL(∞)=400mA, vC(∞)=6V, = vR(∞)=16V EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
  • 53. 53 Problem 8:Refer to the circuit. Determine: (a) i(0+) and v(0+) (b) di ∕(0+)dt and dv(0+) ∕dt (c) i(∞) and v(∞). Ans: (a) i(0+) = 0A ,v(0+) = 0V (b) di ∕(0+)dt = 4A/s, dv(0+) ∕dt =0V/s (c) i(∞) = 2.4A, v(∞) = 9.6V EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
  • 54. 54 Problem 9: In the circuit, find: (a) vR(0+) and vL(0+) (b) dvR(0+) ∕dt and dvL(0+) ∕dt (c) vR(∞) and vL(∞) Ans: (a) vR(0+) =0V , vL(0+) =0V (b) dvR(0+) ∕dt =0V/s , dvL(0+) ∕dt = Vs/(CRs) (c) vR(∞) = [R/(R + Rs)]Vs, vL(∞) =0V EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES
  • 55. 55 Source-Free Series RLC Circuit Problem 10: The current in an RLC circuit is described by If i(0) = 10 A and di(0) ∕dt = 0, find i(t) for t > 0. Problem 11: The natural response of an RLC circuit is described by the differential equation, for which the initial conditions are v(0) = 10 V and dv(0) ∕dt = 0. Solve for v(t). EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES 2 2 10 25 0 d i di i dt dt    2 2 2 0 d v dv v dt dt    Ans: i(t) = [(10 + 50t)e-5t] A Ans: v(t) = [(10 + 10t)e-t] V
  • 56. 56 Problem 12: The switch moves from position A to position B at t = 0 (please note that the switch must connect to point B before it breaks the connection at A, a make-before-break switch). Let v(0) = 0, find v(t) for t > 0. EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES Ans: v(t) =5.333e–2t–5.333e–0.5t V
  • 57. 57 Problem 13: In the circuit, the switch instantaneously moves from position A to B at t = 0. Find v(t) for all t ≥ 0. EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES Ans: v(t) = [21.55e-2.679t – 1.55e-37.32t] V
  • 58. 58 Problem 14: The switch in the circuit has been closed for a long time but is opened at t = 0. Determine i(t) for t > 0. EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES Ans: i(t) = (15cos(2t) + 15sin(2t))e-2t A
  • 59. 59 Source-Free Parallel RLC Circuit Problem 15: For the network, what value of C is needed to make the response underdamped with unity neper frequency (α = 1)? EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES Ans: C = 40 mF
  • 60. 60 Problem 16: The switch moves from position A to position B at t = 0 (please note that the switch must connect to point B before it breaks the connection at A, a make-before-break switch). Determine i(t) for t > 0. EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES Ans: i(t) = e–5t[4cos(19.365t) + 1.0328sin(19.365t)] A
  • 61. 61 Problem 17: A source free RLC has R= 1Ω, C=1nF and L= 1pF. Calculate (a) calculate α and ω0 (b) s1and s2 (c)What is the form of inductor current response for t>0. Ans: (a) α =5x108 s-1 , ω0=3.16x1013 rad/s (b) s1and s2= (c) The circuit is underdamped since α <ω0 EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES 9 21 18 0.5 10 10 (0.25)(10 ) j    
  • 62. 62 Problem 18:Assuming R=2kΩ, design a parallel RLC circuit that has the characteristic equation Ans: L=20H, C=50nF Problem 19: Calculate io(t) and vo(t) for t > 0. EXERCISE AND NUMERICAL EXAMPLES 2 6 100 10 0 s s    Ans: vo(t) =(24cos1.9843t + 3.024sin1.9843t)e-t/4 V io(t) =[– 12.095sin1.9843t]e–t/4 A.
  • 63. REFERENCES 63 [1] Charles K. Alexander and Matthew N. O. Sadiku, “Fundamentals of Electric Circuits”, 6th Ed., McGraw Hill, Indian Edition, 2013. [2] William H. Hayt, Jr., Jack E. Kemmerly, Steven M. Durbin, “Engineering Circuit Analysis” 8th Ed., McGraw- Hill, New York, 2012.