MWFTR
- I welcome your
questions and comments. -Charles Kim.
Email to me at ckimson@gmail.com
The Laws of Circuit - you can learn and practice by just
reading
copyright. Charles Kim 2006
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- KVL (Kirchhoff's
Voltage Law) and Roller Coaster Ride
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- I hate roller coaster. Actually I do not.
I hate riding roller coaster. I still do not understand
those riding and enjoying folks in the numerous amusement
parks. I did ride a roller coaster once and instantly I
decided to hate riding one. That's a million years ago,
anyway. However, riding roller coaster could help you
better understand KVL.
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- KVL first. KVL is about voltage. In other
words, the sum of voltages surrounding a loop in a
circuit must be zero. The tricky point here is that each
voltage in the loop should carry a sign with its value in
the algebraic sum equation. In other words, the algebraic
sum equation should look like: (+V1)+(+V2)+(-V3)+(-V4)=0
or (+20)+(+2)+(-2)+)+(-20)=0. The question is how do we
determine the signs of the voltages. So let's ride a
roller coaster, minus me.
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- A roller coaster is not roller coaster if
there is no climbing up and climbing down, with very high
speed. Actually the ride does not have any flat track
span. Otherwise, it would not attract any riders except
me. Side bar: Voltage is a potential difference between
two points. Higher potential side is marked with plus or
positive (+) polarity, and the lower side, minus or
negative (-) polarity. The voltage can be a voltage
source with given value and polarities in the circle
symbol or a voltage developed across a resistor or a
voltage across a current source. Another side bar:
negative power indicates supplied power and positive
power consumed power. At least the convention in circuit
theory in US.
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- Back to the roller coaster. In the
climbing up track span, it needs energy to pull it up to
higher position. In the down track span, it consumes the
energy gained from the up drive. In the ride, you meet
many voltages: voltage source, voltage across a resistor,
voltage across another resistor, or voltage across a
current source. A voltage must have polarities: + and -.
When the roller coaster rides along the loop, a pass from
(-) polarity to (+) polarity of a voltage is climbing up
ride. A pass from (+) polarity to (-) polarity of a
voltage is down ride. When the roller coaster is climbing
ride through a voltage, the sign of the voltage is
negative (-). Mind you that climbing-up needs energy and
negative power supplies. If the roller coaster is in down
ride through a voltage, the sign of the voltage is
positive (+). Again down ride consumes power and positive
power consumes.
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- Have you ever ridden a roller coaster
which rides forward first and then, after one ride, does
one reverse ride? With a single ticket? A double dip,
right? No. Roller coaster runs only one direction. In KVL
once you choose which direction your roller coaster runs
(clockwise or counterclockwise) on the loop, you should
not change the direction in the middle of your ride.
Never. But unlike the roller coaster you tried and wowed
in a Texas town, at least you can select the direction of
your ride before your start.
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- By the way, how and who determines the
voltage polarity at the first before applying KVL? You.
Basically you do on almost all voltages in the circuit.
Except one. Voltage source: independent or dependent.
Since voltage sources come with polarity of + and -, you
have to honor them. On a resistor, you can first
determine the current flow direction and you follow the
voltage polarity honoring the passive convention. Or you
simply decide your voltage polarity first and let the
current flow direction flow according to the passive
convention. All right. Now welcome aboard KVL and sit
back and relax for a wild ride. And I am watching you up.
- Another way to see the roller
coaster and KVL
- You know that anything goes up goes down.
With climb-ups go climb-down back to the starting point.
That is in a sense "energy conservation". In
this point of view, we collect all the climb-ups at the
left-hand side and all the climb-downs at the left, and
the both sides must be the same. In other words, in a
loop travelled by a roller coaster in a direction, the
sum of the voltages "rises" is the same as the
sume of the voltage "downs." That is
(+V1)+(+V2)+(-V3)+(-V4)=0 is the same as V1+V2=V3+V4 or
20+2=20+2.
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