Chapter 5 Useful Circuit Analysis Techniques Fig 5

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Chapter 5 Useful Circuit Analysis Techniques Fig. 5. 1 A circuit with two independent

Chapter 5 Useful Circuit Analysis Techniques Fig. 5. 1 A circuit with two independent current sources. Fig. 5. 2 (a) A voltage source set to zero acts like a short circuit… User Note: Fig. 5. 3 Circuit from Example 5. 1 (Superposition Example). Run View Show under the Slide Show menu to enable slide selection. Fig. 5. 6 Circuit from Example 5. 3 (Superposition Example). Fig. 5. 13 (and 5. 14) Practical sources. Fig. 5. 21 (a) A complex network including a load resistor RL. Fig. 5. 22 Figs. from Example 5. 6 (Thévenin/ Norton Equivalents). Fig. 5. 30 Circuit from Example 5. 10. Engineering Circuit Analysis Sixth Edition W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

A circuit with two independent current sources. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E.

A circuit with two independent current sources. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

(a) A voltage source set to zero acts like a short circuit. (b) A

(a) A voltage source set to zero acts like a short circuit. (b) A current source set to zero acts like an open circuit. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

Use superposition to find the current ix. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E.

Use superposition to find the current ix. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

Use superposition to find the current ix. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E.

Use superposition to find the current ix. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

(a) A general practical voltage source connected to a load resistor RL. (b) The

(a) A general practical voltage source connected to a load resistor RL. (b) The terminal characteristics compared to an ideal source. (a) A general practical current source connected to a load resistor RL. (b) The terminal characteristics compared to an ideal source. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

Source Transformations

Source Transformations

(a) A complex network including a load resistor RL. (b) A Thévenin equivalent network

(a) A complex network including a load resistor RL. (b) A Thévenin equivalent network connected to RL. (c) A Norton equivalent network connected to RL. W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

Determine the Thévenin and Norton Equivalents of Network A in (a). W. H. Hayt,

Determine the Thévenin and Norton Equivalents of Network A in (a). W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.

Find the Thévenin equivalent of the circuit shown in (a). W. H. Hayt, Jr.

Find the Thévenin equivalent of the circuit shown in (a). W. H. Hayt, Jr. , J. E. Kemmerly, S. M. Durbin, Engineering Circuit Analysis, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Mc. Graw-Hill. All rights reserved.