D
Deniz
Guest
-->------L--
I | |
C R
| |
= =
Circuit seen above (series RL and a parallel C) is supposed to
resonate somehow. There is a current source driving the circuit (since
I thought that a voltage source driving the circuit would be useless).
Overall impedance (Zo) is calculated as: 1/(R/(w^2*L^2 +
R^2)+j*w*(R^2*C - L + w^2*L^2*C)/(w*L^2 + R^2))
Now in order to maximize abs(Zo) we let imaginary part to be 0, by
letting wo = [1/LC - (R/L)^2]^0.5 (here i assume that abs(Zo) is
maximum when imaginary part is 0). Since Zo is maximized, I*Zo
(voltage across the capacitor (Vc)) will reach the maximum, and at wo
the circuit is said to be resonating?
My first question is: At resonance frequency wo, can we immediately
(without calculating time dependent expressions) say that when the
stored energy in the capacitor reaches maximum, the stored energy in
the inductor becomes 0 ?
2)If we want voltage across R to reach its maximum, we calculate
complex expression for Vr and if we let Vr's imaginary part to be 0,
we come up with a new resonance frequency w1 = (-R/L)^0.5, which is
meaningless. So can we immediately say or predict that voltage accross
R will reach its maximum when we set w = wo = [1/LC - (R/L)^2]^0.5
(which will reveal that finding resonance frequency has nothing to do
with letting the imaginary parts equal to 0)? If wo is making both the
voltage across Zo and R maximum, what is the reason for this?
(calculating the frequency which will make abs(Vr) maximum seemed to
be impossible, so i made a prediction)
3) Is there a series RLC equivalence of this above circuit (for Vr or
Vc)? If there is no such equivalence, how is parallel RLC equivalent
of this circuit calculated (for Vc and Vr) ?
I | |
C R
| |
= =
Circuit seen above (series RL and a parallel C) is supposed to
resonate somehow. There is a current source driving the circuit (since
I thought that a voltage source driving the circuit would be useless).
Overall impedance (Zo) is calculated as: 1/(R/(w^2*L^2 +
R^2)+j*w*(R^2*C - L + w^2*L^2*C)/(w*L^2 + R^2))
Now in order to maximize abs(Zo) we let imaginary part to be 0, by
letting wo = [1/LC - (R/L)^2]^0.5 (here i assume that abs(Zo) is
maximum when imaginary part is 0). Since Zo is maximized, I*Zo
(voltage across the capacitor (Vc)) will reach the maximum, and at wo
the circuit is said to be resonating?
My first question is: At resonance frequency wo, can we immediately
(without calculating time dependent expressions) say that when the
stored energy in the capacitor reaches maximum, the stored energy in
the inductor becomes 0 ?
2)If we want voltage across R to reach its maximum, we calculate
complex expression for Vr and if we let Vr's imaginary part to be 0,
we come up with a new resonance frequency w1 = (-R/L)^0.5, which is
meaningless. So can we immediately say or predict that voltage accross
R will reach its maximum when we set w = wo = [1/LC - (R/L)^2]^0.5
(which will reveal that finding resonance frequency has nothing to do
with letting the imaginary parts equal to 0)? If wo is making both the
voltage across Zo and R maximum, what is the reason for this?
(calculating the frequency which will make abs(Vr) maximum seemed to
be impossible, so i made a prediction)
3) Is there a series RLC equivalence of this above circuit (for Vr or
Vc)? If there is no such equivalence, how is parallel RLC equivalent
of this circuit calculated (for Vc and Vr) ?