General/Chapter 4 Study Guide
From charlesreid1
Chapter 4: Components and Circuits
(Fill in)
Section 4.3: Basic Components
(Fill in)
Resistors
- The change in resistance is a function of the resistor's temperature coefficient
- Inductive resistors can affect RF circuits and change signals (contain metal winding)
- Use non-inductive resistors in RF circuits
Inductors:
- Double lines in symbol mean metal core
- Inductors store an amount of magnetic energy, from the current flowing through it
- Higher inductance means more magnetic energy stored
- Higher permeability of core increases inductance
- Mutual inductance - current generated from a shared magnetic core
- To avoid mutual inductance, use torroidal inductors, or place inductors at right angles
- Inductor material can be optimized for particular frequencies
Capacitors:
- Basic structure: two conductors separated by a dielectric, which stores electrical energy while preventing DC current flow
- The closer the surfaces, the larger the SA, the larger the dielectric energy storage, the higher the capacitance
- Rolled up capacitors have significant parasitic inductance
- Ceramic capacitors are more common at higher frequencies
- Electrolytic capacitors use electrolyte gel/paste, pack higher capacitance into smaller volume
- Polarized capacitors - current can only flow in 1 direction
- Voltage rating of capacitors is the voltage above which the dielectric insulation will break down
- Blocking capacitors l- block DC signals, but not AC signals
- Bypass capacitors - low impedance path across high impedance circuit
- Filter capacitors - smooth out rectified AC into DC power
- Suppressor capacitors - absorb transient voltage spikes
- Tuning capacitors - varying resonant circuit frequencies
Components in series/parallel:
- series resistance is additive: ----R1----R2----R3---- R1+R2+R3
- series inductance is additive: L1+L2+L3
- series capacitance is reciprocal of reciprocals 1 / ( 1/C1 + 1/C2 + 1/C3 )
- parallel resistances are reciprocal of reciprocals
- parallel inductors are reciprocal of reciprocal
- parallel capacitors are additive
Transformers:
- Transformers utilize mutual inductance (shared magnetic core)
- Inductors are called windings
- Power applied to primary winding
- Power extracted from secondary winding
- Changing number of windings changes current (power is conserved)
- significant changes between primary/secondary voltages requires changes in wire size
- Step-up transformer: primary winding has higher current, so wound with larger diameter wire
- Relation between voltage and number of windings:
$ \frac{E_s}{E_p} = \frac{N_s}{N_p} $
Section 4.4: Reactance and Impedance
Reactance:
- capacitors and inductors respond differently to AC and DC
- resistance to AC is called reactance X (measured in ohms)
- Reactance occurs because capacitors and inductors store energy
Capacitive reactance:
- When DC applied to capacitor:
- Current rushes in
- Capacitor begins to store energy
- Voltage in capacitor rises
- Decrease in voltage leads to decrease in delta V, driving force of current
- the more energy stored in capacitor, the lower the current that flows
- eventually, current stops
- Capacitor in DC circuit:
- Capacitor initially looks like a short circuit (closed circuit)
- After capacitor is charged, looks like an open circuit
- Capacitors block DC current
- When AC applied to capacitor:
- At low frequencies, AC behaves like DC
- Capacitor has enough time to charge, stop current
- If AC voltage is higher frequency, capacitor never fully charges to reduce current very much
- Capacitors block DC current, resist low frequency AC and pass high frequency AC
- Opposition to AC current from stored energy is called capacitive reactance $ X_c $ and changes with frequency
$ X_c = \dfrac{1}{2 \pi f C} $
Inductive reactance:
- Inductors resist current in a complementary way to capacitors
- When DC voltage applied to inductor:
- Current rushes through coil and magnetic energy begins to fill the core
- THe change in the magnetic field resists current initially, gradually lets more through
- When inductor dielectric material is "fully charged," current can pass through it
- WHen voltage first applied, inductor looks like an open circuit
- AFfter time, inductor looks like closed circuit
- Inductor treats DC in an opposite way from capacitor
- If AC voltage applied to inductor:
- Magnetic field perpetually changing
- Current always opposed
- If low-frequency AC, inductor's magnetic core has time to change nad let current pass through
- An inductor blocks high-frequency AC, passes low-frequency AC currents, and acts as a short circuit for DC currents
- Inductive reactance is opposition to AC current flow from stored energy and is denoted $ X_L $
$ X_L = 2 \pi f L $
In summary:
Capacitors oppose changes in voltage.
Inductors oppose changes in current.