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LC circuit

An LC circuit, also called a resonant circuit, tank circuit, or tuned circuit, is an electric circuit consisting of an inductor, represented by the letter L, and a capacitor, represented by the letter C, connected together. The circuit can act as an electrical resonator, an electrical analogue of a tuning fork, storing energy oscillating at the circuit's resonant frequency.

LC circuits are used either for generating signals at a particular frequency, or picking out a signal at a particular frequency from a more complex signal; this function is called a bandpass filter. They are key components in many electronic devices, particularly radio equipment, used in circuits such as oscillators, filters, tuners and frequency mixers.

An LC circuit is an idealized model since it assumes there is no dissipation of energy due to resistance. Any practical implementation of an LC circuit will always include loss resulting from small but non-zero resistance within the components and connecting wires. The purpose of an LC circuit is usually to oscillate with minimal damping, so the resistance is made as low as possible. While no practical circuit is without losses, it is nonetheless instructive to study this ideal form of the circuit to gain understanding and physical intuition. For a circuit model incorporating resistance, see RLC circuit.

Terminology Edit

The two-element LC circuit described above is the simplest type of inductor-capacitor network (or LC network). It is also referred to as a second order LC circuit[1][2] to distinguish it from more complicated (higher order) LC networks with more inductors and capacitors. Such LC networks with more than two reactances may have more than one resonant frequency.

The order of the network is the order of the rational function describing the network in the complex frequency variable s. Generally, the order is equal to the number of L and C elements in the circuit and in any event cannot exceed this number.

Operation Edit

 
Animated diagram showing the operation of a tuned circuit (LC circuit). The capacitor C stores energy in its electric field E and the inductor L stores energy in its magnetic field B (green). The animation shows the circuit at progressive points in the oscillation. The oscillations are slowed down; in an actual tuned circuit the charge may oscillate back and forth thousands to billions of times per second.

An LC circuit, oscillating at its natural resonant frequency, can store electrical energy. See the animation. A capacitor stores energy in the electric field (E) between its plates, depending on the voltage across it, and an inductor stores energy in its magnetic field (B), depending on the current through it.

If an inductor is connected across a charged capacitor, the voltage across the capacitor will drive a current through the inductor, building up a magnetic field around it. The voltage across the capacitor falls to zero as the charge is used up by the current flow. At this point, the energy stored in the coil's magnetic field induces a voltage across the coil, because inductors oppose changes in current. This induced voltage causes a current to begin to recharge the capacitor with a voltage of opposite polarity to its original charge. Due to Faraday's law, the EMF which drives the current is caused by a decrease in the magnetic field, thus the energy required to charge the capacitor is extracted from the magnetic field. When the magnetic field is completely dissipated the current will stop and the charge will again be stored in the capacitor, with the opposite polarity as before. Then the cycle will begin again, with the current flowing in the opposite direction through the inductor.

The charge flows back and forth between the plates of the capacitor, through the inductor. The energy oscillates back and forth between the capacitor and the inductor until (if not replenished from an external circuit) internal resistance makes the oscillations die out. The tuned circuit's action, known mathematically as a harmonic oscillator, is similar to a pendulum swinging back and forth, or water sloshing back and forth in a tank; for this reason the circuit is also called a tank circuit.[3] The natural frequency (that is, the frequency at which it will oscillate when isolated from any other system, as described above) is determined by the capacitance and inductance values. In most applications the tuned circuit is part of a larger circuit which applies alternating current to it, driving continuous oscillations. If the frequency of the applied current is the circuit's natural resonant frequency (natural frequency   below), resonance will occur, and a small driving current can excite large amplitude oscillating voltages and currents. In typical tuned circuits in electronic equipment the oscillations are very fast, from thousands to billions of times per second.[citation needed]

Resonance effect Edit

Resonance occurs when an LC circuit is driven from an external source at an angular frequency ω0 at which the inductive and capacitive reactances are equal in magnitude. The frequency at which this equality holds for the particular circuit is called the resonant frequency. The resonant frequency of the LC circuit is

 

where L is the inductance in henries, and C is the capacitance in farads. The angular frequency ω0 has units of radians per second.

The equivalent frequency in units of hertz is

 

Applications Edit

The resonance effect of the LC circuit has many important applications in signal processing and communications systems.

  • The most common application of tank circuits is tuning radio transmitters and receivers. For example, when tuning a radio to a particular station, the LC circuits are set at resonance for that particular carrier frequency.
  • A series resonant circuit provides voltage magnification.
  • A parallel resonant circuit provides current magnification.
  • A parallel resonant circuit can be used as load impedance in output circuits of RF amplifiers. Due to high impedance, the gain of amplifier is maximum at resonant frequency.
  • Both parallel and series resonant circuits are used in induction heating.

LC circuits behave as electronic resonators, which are a key component in many applications:

Time domain solution Edit

Kirchhoff's laws Edit

By Kirchhoff's voltage law, the voltage VC across the capacitor plus the voltage VL across the inductor must equal zero:

 

Likewise, by Kirchhoff's current law, the current through the capacitor equals the current through the inductor:

 

From the constitutive relations for the circuit elements, we also know that

 

Differential equation Edit

Rearranging and substituting gives the second order differential equation

 

The parameter ω0, the resonant angular frequency, is defined as

 

Using this can simplify the differential equation:

 

The associated Laplace transform is

 

thus

 

where j is the imaginary unit.

Solution Edit

Thus, the complete solution to the differential equation is

 

and can be solved for A and B by considering the initial conditions. Since the exponential is complex, the solution represents a sinusoidal alternating current. Since the electric current I is a physical quantity, it must be real-valued. As a result, it can be shown that the constants A and B must be complex conjugates:

 

Now let

 

Therefore,

 

Next, we can use Euler's formula to obtain a real sinusoid with amplitude I0, angular frequency ω0 = 1/LC, and phase angle  .

Thus, the resulting solution becomes

 
 

Initial conditions Edit

The initial conditions that would satisfy this result are

 
 

Series circuit Edit

 
Series LC circuit

In the series configuration of the LC circuit, the inductor (L) and capacitor (C) are connected in series, as shown here. The total voltage V across the open terminals is simply the sum of the voltage across the inductor and the voltage across the capacitor. The current I into the positive terminal of the circuit is equal to the current through both the capacitor and the inductor.

 

Resonance Edit

Inductive reactance   increases as frequency increases, while capacitive reactance   decreases with increase in frequency (defined here as a positive number). At one particular frequency, these two reactances are equal and the voltages across them are equal and opposite in sign; that frequency is called the resonant frequency f0 for the given circuit.

Hence, at resonance,

 

Solving for ω, we have

 

which is defined as the resonant angular frequency of the circuit. Converting angular frequency (in radians per second) into frequency (in hertz), one has

 

In a series configuration, XC and XL cancel each other out. In real, rather than idealised, components, the current is opposed, mostly by the resistance of the coil windings. Thus, the current supplied to a series resonant circuit is maximal at resonance.

  • In the limit as ff0 current is maximal. Circuit impedance is minimal. In this state, a circuit is called an acceptor circuit[4]
  • For f < f0, XLXC. Hence, the circuit is capacitive.
  • For f > f0, XLXC. Hence, the circuit is inductive.

Impedance Edit

In the series configuration, resonance occurs when the complex electrical impedance of the circuit approaches zero.

First consider the impedance of the series LC circuit. The total impedance is given by the sum of the inductive and capacitive impedances:

 

Writing the inductive impedance as ZL = jωL and capacitive impedance as ZC = 1/jωC and substituting gives

 

Writing this expression under a common denominator gives

 

Finally, defining the natural angular frequency as

 

the impedance becomes

 

where   gives the reactance of the inductor at resonance.

The numerator implies that in the limit as ω → ±ω0, the total impedance Z will be zero and otherwise non-zero. Therefore the series LC circuit, when connected in series with a load, will act as a band-pass filter having zero impedance at the resonant frequency of the LC circuit.

Parallel circuit Edit

 
Parallel LC circuit

When the inductor (L) and capacitor (C) are connected in parallel as shown here, the voltage V across the open terminals is equal to both the voltage across the inductor and the voltage across the capacitor. The total current I flowing into the positive terminal of the circuit is equal to the sum of the current flowing through the inductor and the current flowing through the capacitor:

 

Resonance Edit

When XL equals XC, the two branch currents are equal and opposite. They cancel out each other to give minimal current in the main line (in principle, zero current). However, there is a large current circulating between the capacitor and inductor. In principle, this circulating current is infinite, but in reality is limited by resistance in the circuit, particularly resistance in the inductor windings. Since total current is minimal, in this state the total impedance is maximal.

The resonant frequency is given by

 

Any branch current is not minimal at resonance, but each is given separately by dividing source voltage (V) by reactance (Z). Hence I = V/Z, as per Ohm's law.

  • At f0, the line current is minimal. The total impedance is maximal. In this state a circuit is called a rejector circuit.[5]
  • Below f0, the circuit is inductive.
  • Above f0, the circuit is capacitive.

Impedance Edit

The same analysis may be applied to the parallel LC circuit. The total impedance is then given by

 

and after substitution of ZL = jωL and ZC = 1/jωC and simplification, gives

 

Using

 

it further simplifies to

 

Note that

 

but for all other values of ω the impedance is finite.

Thus, the parallel LC circuit connected in series with a load will act as band-stop filter having infinite impedance at the resonant frequency of the LC circuit, while the parallel LC circuit connected in parallel with a load will act as band-pass filter.

Laplace solution Edit

The LC circuit can be solved using the Laplace transform.

We begin by defining the relation between current and voltage across the capacitor and inductor in the usual way:

    and  

Then by application of Kirchoff's laws, we may arrive at the system's governing differential equations

 

With initial conditions   and  

Making the following definitions,

  and  

gives

 

Now we apply the Laplace transform.

 
 

The Laplace transform has turned our differential equation into an algebraic equation. Solving for V in the s domain (frequency domain) is much simpler viz.

 

which can be transformed back to the time domain via the inverse Laplace transform:

 

The final term is dependent on the exact form of the input voltage. Two common cases are the Heaviside step function and a sine wave. For a Heaviside step function we get

 
 
 

For the case of a sinusoidal function as input we get:

 
 
  so
 

History Edit

The first evidence that a capacitor and inductor could produce electrical oscillations was discovered in 1826 by French scientist Felix Savary.[6][7] He found that when a Leyden jar was discharged through a wire wound around an iron needle, sometimes the needle was left magnetized in one direction and sometimes in the opposite direction. He correctly deduced that this was caused by a damped oscillating discharge current in the wire, which reversed the magnetization of the needle back and forth until it was too small to have an effect, leaving the needle magnetized in a random direction. American physicist Joseph Henry repeated Savary's experiment in 1842 and came to the same conclusion, apparently independently.[8][9]

Irish scientist William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) in 1853 showed mathematically that the discharge of a Leyden jar through an inductance should be oscillatory, and derived its resonant frequency.[6][8][9] British radio researcher Oliver Lodge, by discharging a large battery of Leyden jars through a long wire, created a tuned circuit with its resonant frequency in the audio range, which produced a musical tone from the spark when it was discharged.[8] In 1857, German physicist Berend Wilhelm Feddersen photographed the spark produced by a resonant Leyden jar circuit in a rotating mirror, providing visible evidence of the oscillations.[6][8][9] In 1868, Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell calculated the effect of applying an alternating current to a circuit with inductance and capacitance, showing that the response is maximum at the resonant frequency.[6] The first example of an electrical resonance curve was published in 1887 by German physicist Heinrich Hertz in his pioneering paper on the discovery of radio waves, showing the length of spark obtainable from his spark-gap LC resonator detectors as a function of frequency.[6]

One of the first demonstrations of resonance between tuned circuits was Lodge's "syntonic jars" experiment around 1889.[6][8] He placed two resonant circuits next to each other, each consisting of a Leyden jar connected to an adjustable one-turn coil with a spark gap. When a high voltage from an induction coil was applied to one tuned circuit, creating sparks and thus oscillating currents, sparks were excited in the other tuned circuit only when the circuits were adjusted to resonance. Lodge and some English scientists preferred the term "syntony" for this effect, but the term "resonance" eventually stuck.[6] The first practical use for LC circuits was in the 1890s in spark-gap radio transmitters to allow the receiver and transmitter to be tuned to the same frequency. The first patent for a radio system that allowed tuning was filed by Lodge in 1897, although the first practical systems were invented in 1900 by Italian radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi.[6]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Makarov, Sergey N.; Ludwig, Reinhold; Bitar, Stephen J. (2016). Practical Electrical Engineering. Springer. pp. X-483. ISBN 9783319211732.
  2. ^ Dorf, Richard C.; Svoboda, James A. (2010). Introduction to Electric Circuits, 8th Ed. John Wiley and Sons. p. 368. ISBN 9780470521571.
  3. ^ Rao, B. Visvesvara; et al. (2012). Electronic Circuit Analysis. India: Pearson Education India. p. 13.6. ISBN 978-9332511743.
  4. ^ What is Acceptor Circuit.
  5. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. English. Archived from the original on September 20, 2018. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Blanchard, Julian (October 1941). "The History of Electrical Resonance". Bell System Technical Journal. U.S.: American Telephone & Telegraph Co. 20 (4): 415–433. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1941.tb03608.x. S2CID 51669988. Retrieved 2011-03-29.
  7. ^ Savary, Felix (1827). "Memoirs sur l'Aimentation". Annales de Chimie et de Physique. Paris: Masson. 34: 5–37.
  8. ^ a b c d e Kimball, Arthur Lalanne (1917). A College Text-book of Physics (2nd ed.). New York: Henry Hold. pp. 516–517.
  9. ^ a b c Huurdeman, Anton A. (2003). The Worldwide History of Telecommunications. U.S.: Wiley-IEEE. pp. 199–200. ISBN 0-471-20505-2.

External links Edit

  • An electric pendulum by Tony Kuphaldt is a classical story about the operation of LC tank
  • How the parallel-LC circuit stores energy is another excellent LC resource.

circuit, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2009, learn. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources LC circuit news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message An LC circuit also called a resonant circuit tank circuit or tuned circuit is an electric circuit consisting of an inductor represented by the letter L and a capacitor represented by the letter C connected together The circuit can act as an electrical resonator an electrical analogue of a tuning fork storing energy oscillating at the circuit s resonant frequency LC circuit diagram LC circuit left consisting of ferrite coil and capacitor used as a tuned circuit in the receiver for a radio clock Output tuned circuit of shortwave radio transmitterLC circuits are used either for generating signals at a particular frequency or picking out a signal at a particular frequency from a more complex signal this function is called a bandpass filter They are key components in many electronic devices particularly radio equipment used in circuits such as oscillators filters tuners and frequency mixers An LC circuit is an idealized model since it assumes there is no dissipation of energy due to resistance Any practical implementation of an LC circuit will always include loss resulting from small but non zero resistance within the components and connecting wires The purpose of an LC circuit is usually to oscillate with minimal damping so the resistance is made as low as possible While no practical circuit is without losses it is nonetheless instructive to study this ideal form of the circuit to gain understanding and physical intuition For a circuit model incorporating resistance see RLC circuit Contents 1 Terminology 2 Operation 3 Resonance effect 4 Applications 5 Time domain solution 5 1 Kirchhoff s laws 5 2 Differential equation 5 3 Solution 5 4 Initial conditions 6 Series circuit 6 1 Resonance 6 2 Impedance 7 Parallel circuit 7 1 Resonance 7 2 Impedance 8 Laplace solution 9 History 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksTerminology EditThe two element LC circuit described above is the simplest type of inductor capacitor network or LC network It is also referred to as a second order LC circuit 1 2 to distinguish it from more complicated higher order LC networks with more inductors and capacitors Such LC networks with more than two reactances may have more than one resonant frequency The order of the network is the order of the rational function describing the network in the complex frequency variable s Generally the order is equal to the number of L and C elements in the circuit and in any event cannot exceed this number Operation Edit nbsp Animated diagram showing the operation of a tuned circuit LC circuit The capacitor C stores energy in its electric field E and the inductor L stores energy in its magnetic field B green The animation shows the circuit at progressive points in the oscillation The oscillations are slowed down in an actual tuned circuit the charge may oscillate back and forth thousands to billions of times per second An LC circuit oscillating at its natural resonant frequency can store electrical energy See the animation A capacitor stores energy in the electric field E between its plates depending on the voltage across it and an inductor stores energy in its magnetic field B depending on the current through it If an inductor is connected across a charged capacitor the voltage across the capacitor will drive a current through the inductor building up a magnetic field around it The voltage across the capacitor falls to zero as the charge is used up by the current flow At this point the energy stored in the coil s magnetic field induces a voltage across the coil because inductors oppose changes in current This induced voltage causes a current to begin to recharge the capacitor with a voltage of opposite polarity to its original charge Due to Faraday s law the EMF which drives the current is caused by a decrease in the magnetic field thus the energy required to charge the capacitor is extracted from the magnetic field When the magnetic field is completely dissipated the current will stop and the charge will again be stored in the capacitor with the opposite polarity as before Then the cycle will begin again with the current flowing in the opposite direction through the inductor The charge flows back and forth between the plates of the capacitor through the inductor The energy oscillates back and forth between the capacitor and the inductor until if not replenished from an external circuit internal resistance makes the oscillations die out The tuned circuit s action known mathematically as a harmonic oscillator is similar to a pendulum swinging back and forth or water sloshing back and forth in a tank for this reason the circuit is also called a tank circuit 3 The natural frequency that is the frequency at which it will oscillate when isolated from any other system as described above is determined by the capacitance and inductance values In most applications the tuned circuit is part of a larger circuit which applies alternating current to it driving continuous oscillations If the frequency of the applied current is the circuit s natural resonant frequency natural frequency f 0 displaystyle f 0 nbsp below resonance will occur and a small driving current can excite large amplitude oscillating voltages and currents In typical tuned circuits in electronic equipment the oscillations are very fast from thousands to billions of times per second citation needed Resonance effect EditResonance occurs when an LC circuit is driven from an external source at an angular frequency w0 at which the inductive and capacitive reactances are equal in magnitude The frequency at which this equality holds for the particular circuit is called the resonant frequency The resonant frequency of the LC circuit is w 0 1 L C displaystyle omega 0 frac 1 sqrt LC nbsp where L is the inductance in henries and C is the capacitance in farads The angular frequency w0 has units of radians per second The equivalent frequency in units of hertz is f 0 w 0 2 p 1 2 p L C displaystyle f 0 frac omega 0 2 pi frac 1 2 pi sqrt LC nbsp Applications EditThe resonance effect of the LC circuit has many important applications in signal processing and communications systems The most common application of tank circuits is tuning radio transmitters and receivers For example when tuning a radio to a particular station the LC circuits are set at resonance for that particular carrier frequency A series resonant circuit provides voltage magnification A parallel resonant circuit provides current magnification A parallel resonant circuit can be used as load impedance in output circuits of RF amplifiers Due to high impedance the gain of amplifier is maximum at resonant frequency Both parallel and series resonant circuits are used in induction heating LC circuits behave as electronic resonators which are a key component in many applications Amplifiers Oscillators Filters Tuners Mixers Foster Seeley discriminator Contactless cards Graphics tablets Electronic article surveillance security tags Time domain solution EditKirchhoff s laws Edit By Kirchhoff s voltage law the voltage VC across the capacitor plus the voltage VL across the inductor must equal zero V C V L 0 displaystyle V C V L 0 nbsp Likewise by Kirchhoff s current law the current through the capacitor equals the current through the inductor I C I L displaystyle I C I L nbsp From the constitutive relations for the circuit elements we also know that V L t L d I L d t I C t C d V C d t displaystyle begin aligned V L t amp L frac mathrm d I L mathrm d t I C t amp C frac mathrm d V C mathrm d t end aligned nbsp Differential equation Edit Rearranging and substituting gives the second order differential equation d 2 d t 2 I t 1 L C I t 0 displaystyle frac mathrm d 2 mathrm d t 2 I t frac 1 LC I t 0 nbsp The parameter w0 the resonant angular frequency is defined as w 0 1 L C displaystyle omega 0 frac 1 sqrt LC nbsp Using this can simplify the differential equation d 2 d t 2 I t w 0 2 I t 0 displaystyle frac mathrm d 2 mathrm d t 2 I t omega 0 2 I t 0 nbsp The associated Laplace transform is s 2 w 0 2 0 displaystyle s 2 omega 0 2 0 nbsp thus s j w 0 displaystyle s pm j omega 0 nbsp where j is the imaginary unit Solution Edit Thus the complete solution to the differential equation is I t A e j w 0 t B e j w 0 t displaystyle I t Ae j omega 0 t Be j omega 0 t nbsp and can be solved for A and B by considering the initial conditions Since the exponential is complex the solution represents a sinusoidal alternating current Since the electric current I is a physical quantity it must be real valued As a result it can be shown that the constants A and B must be complex conjugates A B displaystyle A B nbsp Now let A I 0 2 e j ϕ displaystyle A frac I 0 2 e j phi nbsp Therefore B I 0 2 e j ϕ displaystyle B frac I 0 2 e j phi nbsp Next we can use Euler s formula to obtain a real sinusoid with amplitude I0 angular frequency w0 1 LC and phase angle ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp Thus the resulting solution becomes I t I 0 cos w 0 t ϕ displaystyle I t I 0 cos left omega 0 t phi right nbsp V L t L d I d t w 0 L I 0 sin w 0 t ϕ displaystyle V L t L frac mathrm d I mathrm d t omega 0 LI 0 sin left omega 0 t phi right nbsp Initial conditions Edit The initial conditions that would satisfy this result are I 0 I 0 cos ϕ displaystyle I 0 I 0 cos phi nbsp V L 0 L d I d t t 0 w 0 L I 0 sin ϕ displaystyle V L 0 L frac mathrm d I mathrm d t Bigg t 0 omega 0 LI 0 sin phi nbsp Series circuit Edit nbsp Series LC circuitIn the series configuration of the LC circuit the inductor L and capacitor C are connected in series as shown here The total voltage V across the open terminals is simply the sum of the voltage across the inductor and the voltage across the capacitor The current I into the positive terminal of the circuit is equal to the current through both the capacitor and the inductor V V L V C I I L I C displaystyle begin aligned V amp V L V C I amp I L I C end aligned nbsp Resonance Edit Inductive reactance X L w L displaystyle X L omega L nbsp increases as frequency increases while capacitive reactance X C 1 w C displaystyle X C frac 1 omega C nbsp decreases with increase in frequency defined here as a positive number At one particular frequency these two reactances are equal and the voltages across them are equal and opposite in sign that frequency is called the resonant frequency f0 for the given circuit Hence at resonance X L X C w L 1 w C displaystyle begin aligned X L amp X C omega L amp frac 1 omega C end aligned nbsp Solving for w we have w w 0 1 L C displaystyle omega omega 0 frac 1 sqrt LC nbsp which is defined as the resonant angular frequency of the circuit Converting angular frequency in radians per second into frequency in hertz one has f 0 w 0 2 p 1 2 p L C displaystyle f 0 frac omega 0 2 pi frac 1 2 pi sqrt LC nbsp In a series configuration XC and XL cancel each other out In real rather than idealised components the current is opposed mostly by the resistance of the coil windings Thus the current supplied to a series resonant circuit is maximal at resonance In the limit as f f0 current is maximal Circuit impedance is minimal In this state a circuit is called an acceptor circuit 4 For f lt f0 XL XC Hence the circuit is capacitive For f gt f0 XL XC Hence the circuit is inductive Impedance Edit In the series configuration resonance occurs when the complex electrical impedance of the circuit approaches zero First consider the impedance of the series LC circuit The total impedance is given by the sum of the inductive and capacitive impedances Z Z L Z C displaystyle Z Z L Z C nbsp Writing the inductive impedance as ZL jwL and capacitive impedance as ZC 1 jwC and substituting gives Z w j w L 1 j w C displaystyle Z omega j omega L frac 1 j omega C nbsp Writing this expression under a common denominator gives Z w j w 2 L C 1 w C displaystyle Z omega j left frac omega 2 LC 1 omega C right nbsp Finally defining the natural angular frequency as w 0 1 L C displaystyle omega 0 frac 1 sqrt LC nbsp the impedance becomes Z w j L w 2 w 0 2 w j w 0 L w w 0 w 0 w displaystyle Z omega j L left frac omega 2 omega 0 2 omega right j omega 0 L left frac omega omega 0 frac omega 0 omega right nbsp where w 0 L displaystyle omega 0 L nbsp gives the reactance of the inductor at resonance The numerator implies that in the limit as w w0 the total impedance Z will be zero and otherwise non zero Therefore the series LC circuit when connected in series with a load will act as a band pass filter having zero impedance at the resonant frequency of the LC circuit Parallel circuit Edit nbsp Parallel LC circuitWhen the inductor L and capacitor C are connected in parallel as shown here the voltage V across the open terminals is equal to both the voltage across the inductor and the voltage across the capacitor The total current I flowing into the positive terminal of the circuit is equal to the sum of the current flowing through the inductor and the current flowing through the capacitor V V L V C I I L I C displaystyle begin aligned V amp V L V C I amp I L I C end aligned nbsp Resonance Edit When XL equals XC the two branch currents are equal and opposite They cancel out each other to give minimal current in the main line in principle zero current However there is a large current circulating between the capacitor and inductor In principle this circulating current is infinite but in reality is limited by resistance in the circuit particularly resistance in the inductor windings Since total current is minimal in this state the total impedance is maximal The resonant frequency is given by f 0 w 0 2 p 1 2 p L C displaystyle f 0 frac omega 0 2 pi frac 1 2 pi sqrt LC nbsp Any branch current is not minimal at resonance but each is given separately by dividing source voltage V by reactance Z Hence I V Z as per Ohm s law At f0 the line current is minimal The total impedance is maximal In this state a circuit is called a rejector circuit 5 Below f0 the circuit is inductive Above f0 the circuit is capacitive Impedance Edit The same analysis may be applied to the parallel LC circuit The total impedance is then given by Z Z L Z C Z L Z C displaystyle Z frac Z L Z C Z L Z C nbsp and after substitution of ZL jwL and ZC 1 jwC and simplification gives Z w j w L w 2 L C 1 displaystyle Z omega j cdot frac omega L omega 2 LC 1 nbsp Using w 0 1 L C displaystyle omega 0 frac 1 sqrt LC nbsp it further simplifies to Z w j 1 C w w 2 w 0 2 displaystyle Z omega j left frac 1 C right left frac omega omega 2 omega 0 2 right nbsp Note that lim w w 0 Z w displaystyle lim omega to omega 0 Z omega infty nbsp but for all other values of w the impedance is finite Thus the parallel LC circuit connected in series with a load will act as band stop filter having infinite impedance at the resonant frequency of the LC circuit while the parallel LC circuit connected in parallel with a load will act as band pass filter Laplace solution EditThe LC circuit can be solved using the Laplace transform We begin by defining the relation between current and voltage across the capacitor and inductor in the usual way v C t v t displaystyle v mathrm C t v t nbsp i t C d v C d t displaystyle i t C frac mathrm d v mathrm C mathrm d t nbsp and v L t L d i d t displaystyle v mathrm L t L frac mathrm d i mathrm d t nbsp Then by application of Kirchoff s laws we may arrive at the system s governing differential equations v i n t v L t v C t L d i d t v L C d 2 v d t 2 v displaystyle v in t v mathrm L t v mathrm C t L frac mathrm d i mathrm d t v L C frac mathrm d 2 v mathrm d t 2 v nbsp With initial conditions v 0 v 0 displaystyle v 0 v 0 nbsp and i 0 i 0 C v 0 C v 0 displaystyle i 0 i 0 C cdot v 0 C cdot v 0 nbsp Making the following definitions w 0 1 L C displaystyle omega 0 equiv frac 1 sqrt L C nbsp and f t w 0 2 v i n t displaystyle f t equiv omega 0 2 v mathrm in t nbsp gives f t d 2 v d t 2 w 0 2 v displaystyle f t frac mathrm d 2 v mathrm d t 2 omega 0 2 v nbsp Now we apply the Laplace transform L f t L d 2 v d t 2 w 0 2 v displaystyle operatorname mathcal L left f t right operatorname mathcal L left frac mathrm d 2 v mathrm d t 2 omega 0 2 v right nbsp F s s 2 V s s v 0 v 0 w 0 2 V s displaystyle F s s 2 V s s v 0 v 0 omega 0 2 V s nbsp The Laplace transform has turned our differential equation into an algebraic equation Solving for V in the s domain frequency domain is much simpler viz V s s v 0 v 0 F s s 2 w 0 2 displaystyle V s frac s v 0 v 0 F s s 2 omega 0 2 nbsp which can be transformed back to the time domain via the inverse Laplace transform v t v 0 cos w 0 t v 0 w 0 sin w 0 t L 1 F s s 2 w 0 2 displaystyle v t v 0 cos omega 0 t frac v 0 omega 0 sin omega 0 t operatorname mathcal L 1 left frac F s s 2 omega 0 2 right nbsp The final term is dependent on the exact form of the input voltage Two common cases are the Heaviside step function and a sine wave For a Heaviside step function we get v i n t M u t displaystyle v mathrm in t M u t nbsp L 1 w 0 2 V i n s s 2 w 0 2 L 1 w 0 2 M 1 s s 2 w 0 2 M 1 cos w 0 t displaystyle operatorname mathcal L 1 left omega 0 2 frac V mathrm in s s 2 omega 0 2 right operatorname mathcal L 1 left omega 0 2 M frac 1 s s 2 omega 0 2 right M Bigl 1 cos omega 0 t Bigr nbsp v t v 0 cos w 0 t v 0 w 0 sin w 0 t M 1 cos w 0 t displaystyle v t v 0 cos omega 0 t frac v 0 omega 0 sin omega 0 t M Bigl 1 cos omega 0 t Bigr nbsp For the case of a sinusoidal function as input we get v i n t U sin w f t V i n s U w f s 2 w f 2 displaystyle v mathrm in t U sin omega mathrm f t Rightarrow V mathrm in s frac U omega mathrm f s 2 omega mathrm f 2 nbsp L 1 w 0 2 1 s 2 w 0 2 U w f s 2 w f 2 L 1 w 0 2 U w f w f 2 w 0 2 1 s 2 w 0 2 1 s 2 w f 2 displaystyle operatorname mathcal L 1 left omega 0 2 frac 1 s 2 omega 0 2 frac U omega mathrm f s 2 omega mathrm f 2 right operatorname mathcal L 1 left frac omega 0 2 U omega mathrm f omega mathrm f 2 omega 0 2 left frac 1 s 2 omega 0 2 frac 1 s 2 omega f 2 right right nbsp w 0 2 U w f w f 2 w 0 2 1 w 0 sin w 0 t 1 w f sin w f t displaystyle qquad qquad frac omega 0 2 U omega mathrm f omega mathrm f 2 omega 0 2 left frac 1 omega 0 sin omega 0 t frac 1 omega mathrm f sin omega mathrm f t right nbsp so v t v 0 cos w 0 t v 0 b b w 0 sin w 0 t w 0 2 U w f w f 2 w 0 2 1 w 0 sin w 0 t 1 w f sin w f t displaystyle v t v 0 cos omega 0 t frac v 0 b b omega 0 sin omega 0 t frac omega 0 2 U omega mathrm f omega mathrm f 2 omega 0 2 left frac 1 omega 0 sin omega 0 t frac 1 omega mathrm f sin omega mathrm f t right nbsp History EditThe first evidence that a capacitor and inductor could produce electrical oscillations was discovered in 1826 by French scientist Felix Savary 6 7 He found that when a Leyden jar was discharged through a wire wound around an iron needle sometimes the needle was left magnetized in one direction and sometimes in the opposite direction He correctly deduced that this was caused by a damped oscillating discharge current in the wire which reversed the magnetization of the needle back and forth until it was too small to have an effect leaving the needle magnetized in a random direction American physicist Joseph Henry repeated Savary s experiment in 1842 and came to the same conclusion apparently independently 8 9 Irish scientist William Thomson Lord Kelvin in 1853 showed mathematically that the discharge of a Leyden jar through an inductance should be oscillatory and derived its resonant frequency 6 8 9 British radio researcher Oliver Lodge by discharging a large battery of Leyden jars through a long wire created a tuned circuit with its resonant frequency in the audio range which produced a musical tone from the spark when it was discharged 8 In 1857 German physicist Berend Wilhelm Feddersen photographed the spark produced by a resonant Leyden jar circuit in a rotating mirror providing visible evidence of the oscillations 6 8 9 In 1868 Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell calculated the effect of applying an alternating current to a circuit with inductance and capacitance showing that the response is maximum at the resonant frequency 6 The first example of an electrical resonance curve was published in 1887 by German physicist Heinrich Hertz in his pioneering paper on the discovery of radio waves showing the length of spark obtainable from his spark gap LC resonator detectors as a function of frequency 6 One of the first demonstrations of resonance between tuned circuits was Lodge s syntonic jars experiment around 1889 6 8 He placed two resonant circuits next to each other each consisting of a Leyden jar connected to an adjustable one turn coil with a spark gap When a high voltage from an induction coil was applied to one tuned circuit creating sparks and thus oscillating currents sparks were excited in the other tuned circuit only when the circuits were adjusted to resonance Lodge and some English scientists preferred the term syntony for this effect but the term resonance eventually stuck 6 The first practical use for LC circuits was in the 1890s in spark gap radio transmitters to allow the receiver and transmitter to be tuned to the same frequency The first patent for a radio system that allowed tuning was filed by Lodge in 1897 although the first practical systems were invented in 1900 by Italian radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi 6 See also EditRL circuit RC circuit RLC circuitReferences Edit Makarov Sergey N Ludwig Reinhold Bitar Stephen J 2016 Practical Electrical Engineering Springer pp X 483 ISBN 9783319211732 Dorf Richard C Svoboda James A 2010 Introduction to Electric Circuits 8th Ed John Wiley and Sons p 368 ISBN 9780470521571 Rao B Visvesvara et al 2012 Electronic Circuit Analysis India Pearson Education India p 13 6 ISBN 978 9332511743 What is Acceptor Circuit rejector circuit Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on September 20 2018 Retrieved 2018 09 20 a b c d e f g h Blanchard Julian October 1941 The History of Electrical Resonance Bell System Technical Journal U S American Telephone amp Telegraph Co 20 4 415 433 doi 10 1002 j 1538 7305 1941 tb03608 x S2CID 51669988 Retrieved 2011 03 29 Savary Felix 1827 Memoirs sur l Aimentation Annales de Chimie et de Physique Paris Masson 34 5 37 a b c d e Kimball Arthur Lalanne 1917 A College Text book of Physics 2nd ed New York Henry Hold pp 516 517 a b c Huurdeman Anton A 2003 The Worldwide History of Telecommunications U S Wiley IEEE pp 199 200 ISBN 0 471 20505 2 External links Edit nbsp The Wikibook Circuit Idea has a page on the topic of How do We Create Sinusoidal Oscillations An electric pendulum by Tony Kuphaldt is a classical story about the operation of LC tank How the parallel LC circuit stores energy is another excellent LC resource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LC circuit amp oldid 1166816710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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