Circuit Theory/Kirchhoff's Law

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Kirchhoff's law is a method of finding the voltage across every device and the current through every device. It takes into account the circuit topology (series/parallel), multiple sources, sources of different types, and components of different types. Technician courses spend a lot of time developing an intuition that will eventually lead to an expertise that is beyond the "design, theory, science" scope of this course.

Kirchhoff's law always works.It is the basis of all simulation software. The goal here is to be able to check, to develop estimations, and build up one's trust/understanding of simulation software.

Kirchhoff's law starts with a drawing. The drawing is of a circuit that is labeled with voltage polarities and current directions, with loops and junctions as described earlier. Kirchhoff's circuit analysis can not start without this drawing.

The circuit may be an existing one that is reversed engineered. The circuit may be a thought experiment that is exploring alternatives. Resistance, Capacitance, Inductance, and any voltage or current, any source voltage or current may be an unknown.

For every unknown, there needs to be an equation according to linear algebra. Kirchhoff's laws find equations in three places:

Counting knowns and unknowns

Look at the drawing and write down the symbols for each known and unknown. If an unknown write it. If a known, write next to it.

Power supply values should be assigned symbols such as and then given values if they are known.

Count the number of unknowns. A component value (resistance, capacitance, inductance), a voltage or a current can be an unknown. This is how many equations there need to be.

Count the number of components. Add the number of loops and junctions. This is how many equations there are. If the number of unknowns doesn't match, there is a problem.

If there are too many equations, there are two possibilities:

If there are too many unknowns, these are the possibilities.

Terminal Equations

The terminal equations were covered earlier. Here are some additional points:

Loop Equations

The principle of energy conservation implies that the sum of the electrical potential differences (voltage) around any closed loop is zero:

Go around the loop in the direction labeled with your finger. If your finger enters the plus side first, the voltage (in the formula, not perhaps in the solution) is positive. If your finger enters the negative side first, the voltage is negative. There are two cases where the voltage will be negative:

The current direction does not matter in the loop equations.

Write an equation for each loop.

The goal is not to guess the + or - voltage of the answer (a technician's goal). The goal is to get the + or - in the equation to correctly match the circuit. When finished, the last step is to look through the answers and see if they make sense from an intuitive point of view. That's it.

Junction Equations

The principle of electric charge conservation implies that at any "junction", the sum of the currents flowing into the note is zero.

n is the total number of branches with currents attached to the "junction."

If the current is flowing into the node, make it positive. If current is flowing out of the node, make it negative.

Check series sections for two different current symbols. Current should be the same in a series section.

The goal of the + and - signs is to capture the circuit design in the equations. This has nothing to do with whether the ultimate current is flowing in or out of the node. Do not try to guess current direction either.

What's Next

Nothing.

Kirchhoff's analysis falls apart because the number of equations increases dramatically as a circuit becomes more complex. This is not a problem for computers, but it is a problem for engineers and techs. The rest of this course is full of math, simplifications, quirks, tricks, tips, and shortcuts. All have limitations. All fail at some point. The goal is to go through them, observe conditions when they succeed and fail, and then add them to our design tool belt and our intuition.

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