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CHAPTER 9

Sinusoidal
Steady-State Analysis

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
CHAPTER CONTENTS
• 9.1 The Sinusoidal Source
• 9.2 The Sinusoidal Response
• 9.3 The Phasor
• 9.4 The Passive Circuit Elements in the Frequency Domain
• 9.5 Kirchhoff’s Laws in the Frequency Domain
• 9.6 Series, Parallel, and Delta-to-Wye Simplifications
• 9.7 Source Transformations and Thévenin-Norton Equivalent
Circuits
• 9.8 The Node-Voltage Method
• 9.9 The Mesh-Current Method
• 9.10 The Transformer
• 9.11 The Ideal Transformer
• 9.12 Phasor Diagrams

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
1. Understand phasor concepts and be able to perform a phasor
transform and an inverse phasor transform.
2. Be able to transform a circuit with a sinusoidal source into the
frequency domain using phasor concepts.
3. Know how to use the following circuit analysis techniques to solve
a circuit in the frequency domain:
▪ Kirchhoff’s laws;
▪ Series, parallel, and delta-to-wye simplifications;
▪ Voltage and current division;
▪ Thévenin and Norton equivalents;
▪ Node-voltage method; and
▪ Mesh-current method.
4. Be. able to analyze circuits containing linear transformers using
phasor methods
5. Understand the ideal transformer constraints and be able to analyze
circuits containing ideal transformers using phasor methods.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
9.1 The Sinusoidal Source
• A sinusoidal voltage source (independent or
dependent) produces a voltage that varies sinusoidally
with time.
• A sinusoidal current source (independent or
dependent) produces a current that varies sinusoidally
with time.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.
James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Figure 9.1 A sinusoidal voltage.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
• The sinusoidal function repeats at regular intervals is
called periodic.
• The length of time is referred to as the period of the
function and is denoted T.

• The angular frequency of the sinusoidal function

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
• The angle f is know as the phase angle of the
sinusoidal voltage.

Figure 9.2 The sinusoidal voltage from Fig.


9.1 shifted to the right when ϕ = 0.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Root mean square (rms)
• The rms value of a periodic function is defined as the
square root of the mean value of the squared function.

• rms value of a sinusoidal voltage source

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.1
• A sinusoidal current (i(t)) has a maximum amplitude
of 20 A.The current passes through one complete
cycle in 1 ms. The magnitude of the current at zero
time is 10 A.
a) What is the frequency of the current in hertz?
b) What is the frequency in radians per second?
c) Write the expression for i(t) using the cosine function.
Express f in degrees.
d) What is the rms value of the current?

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.1

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.2
• A sinusoidal voltage is given by the expression v =
300 cos (120pt + 30°).
a) What is the period of the voltage in milliseconds?
b) What is the frequency in hertz?
c) What is the magnitude of at t = 2.778 ms?
d) What is the rms value of v?

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.2

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.3
• We can translate the sine function to the cosine
function by subtracting 90° (p/2 rad) from the
argument of the sine function.
a) Verify this translation by showing that
sin (ωt + θ) = cos (ωt + θ – 90°).
b) Use the result in (a) to express sin (ωt + 30°) as a
cosine function.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.3

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.4
• Calculate the rms value of the periodic triangular
current shown in Fig. 9.3. Express your answer in
terms of the peak current Ip.

Figure 9.3 Periodic triangular current.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.4

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Example 9.4

Figure 9.4 i2 versus t.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.4

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
9.2 The Sinusoidal Response

Figure 9.5 An RL circuit


excited by a sinusoidal
voltage source.

• Kirchhoff’s voltage law

transient component steady-state component


Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.
James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Transient & Steady-state component
1. The steady-state solution is a sinusoidal function.
2. The frequency of the response signal is identical to
the frequency of the source signal. If R, L, and C,
are constant.
3. The maximum amplitude of the response signal is
Vm / R 2 +  2 L2 and the maximum amplitude of the
signal source is Vm.
4. The phase angle of the current is f – q and that of
the voltage source is f.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
9.3 The Phasor
• The phasor is a complex number that carries the
amplitude and phase angle information of a sinusoidal
function.1 The phasor concept is rooted in Euler’s
identity, which relates the exponential function to the
trigonometric function:

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
• The phasor transform transfers the sinusoidal function
from the time domain to the complex-number domain,
which is also called the frequency domain.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
• Phasor transform

the phasor transform of Vm cos (ωt + θ)

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Inverse Phasor Transform
• finding the inverse phasor transform

the inverse phasor transform of Vm e jf .

• Equation 9.17 indicates that to find the inverse phasor


transform, we multiply the phasor by e jt and then
extract the real part of the product.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
• The transient component vanishes as time elapses, so the
steady state component of the solution must also satisfy
the differential equation.
• In a linear circuit driven by sinusoidal sources, the steady-
state response also is sinusoidal, and the frequency of the
sinusoidal response is the same as the frequency of the
sinusoidal source.
• Using the notation introduced in Eq. 9.11, we can
postulate that the steady-state solution is of the form
where A is the maximum amplitude of the
response and is the phase angle of the response.
• When we substitute the postulated steady-state solution
jt
into the differential equation, the exponential term e
cancels out, leaving the solution for A and b in the
domain of complex numbers.
Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.
James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.
James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.5
• If y1 = 20 cos (ωt – 30°) and y2 = 40 cos (ωt + 60°)
express y = y1 + y2 as a single sinusoidal function.
a) Solve by using trigonometric identities.
b) Solve by using the phasor concept.

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.5

Figure 9.6 A right


triangle used in the
solution for y.
Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.
James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Example 9.5

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Phasor as Rotating Vectors

v(t ) = Vm cos(t + q )
v(t ) = Re Vm e( jt +q ) 
v(t ) = Re Vm ( jt + q ) 
Rotating Phasor

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Phasor Diagrams
Time Domain Re presentation Phasor Domain Re p.
Vm cos(t + f ) Vm f
Vm sin(t + f ) Vm f − 90
I m cos(t + q ) I m q
I m sin(t + q ) I m q − 90

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.
Time Domain Versus Phasor Domain

Electronic Circuits, Tenth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Higher Education.


James W. Nilsson | Susan A. Riedel All rights reserved.

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