![Fundamentals of Electric Circuits](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780078028229/9780078028229_largeCoverImage.gif)
Fundamentals of Electric Circuits
6th Edition
ISBN: 9780078028229
Author: Charles K Alexander, Matthew Sadiku
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 8, Problem 35P
Using Fig. 8.83, design a problem to help other students better understand the step response of series RLC circuits.
Figure 8.83
For Prob. 8.35.
Expert Solution & Answer
![Check Mark](/static/check-mark.png)
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution![Blurred answer](/static/blurred-answer.jpg)
Students have asked these similar questions
Crystallographic planes
Crystallographic planes are denoted by Miller indices.
5b
Algorithm for Miller indices
1. Read off intercepts of plane with axes in
terms of a, b, c
2. Take reciprocals of intercepts
3. Reduce to smallest integer values
4. Enclose in parentheses, no commas.
353
1/3 1/5 1/3
535
(535)
In the cubic system, a plane and a
direction with the same indices are
orthogonal. E.g. [100] direction is
perpendicular to (100) plane.
Correspondingly, [123] direction is
perpendicular to (123) plane.
[2,3,3]
Plane intercepts axes at 3a, 2b, 2c
2
11 1
Reciprocal numbers are:
3'2'2
b.
Indices of the plane (Miller): (2,3,3)
2
a
Indices of the direction: [2,3,3]
X
(200)
(100)
(110)
(111)
(100)
Indices of crystallographic plane can be found from cross product of indices of
any two non-parallel directions in this plane.
Crystallographic positions
Crystallographic position
is denoted by three
numbers, which are
coefficients of the
position vector, e.g. ½½½
for the red atom.
Here the 'new' atom is at a/2 + b/2 + c/2
Silicon crystal has so-called "diamond type lattice".
Each Si atom has 4 nearest neighbors.
Diamond lattice starts with a FCC lattice and then
adds four additional INTERNAL atoms at locations
r = a/4+b/4+c/4 away from each of the atoms. In
other words, diamond lattice is formed by two FCC
lattices sifted by the vector r.
find the answers for this prelab
Chapter 8 Solutions
Fundamentals of Electric Circuits
Ch. 8.2 - The switch in Fig. 8.4 was open for a long time...Ch. 8.2 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.7, find: (a) iL(0+),...Ch. 8.3 - If R = 10 , L = 5 H, and C = 2 mF in Fig. 8.8,...Ch. 8.3 - The circuit in Fig. 8.12 has reached steady state...Ch. 8.4 - In Fig. 8.13, let R = 2 , L = 0.4 H, C = 25 mF,...Ch. 8.4 - Refer to the circuit in Fig. 8.17. Find v(t) for t...Ch. 8.5 - Having been in position a for a long time, the...Ch. 8.6 - Find i(t) and v(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8.7 - Determine v and i for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8.7 - For t 0, obtain v0(t) in the circuit of Fig....
Ch. 8.8 - In the op amp circuit shown in Fig. 8.34, vs =...Ch. 8.9 - Find i(t) using PSpice for 0 t 4 s if the pulse...Ch. 8.9 - Refer to the circuit in Fig. 8.21 (see Practice...Ch. 8.10 - Draw the dual circuit of the one in Fig. 8.46.Ch. 8.10 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.50, obtain the dual...Ch. 8.11 - In Fig. 8.52, find the capacitor voltage vC for t ...Ch. 8.11 - The output of a D/A converter is shown in Fig....Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.58, the capacitor...Ch. 8 - For Review Questions 8.1 and 8.2. 8.2For the...Ch. 8 - When a step input is applied to a second-order...Ch. 8 - If the roots of the characteristic equation of an...Ch. 8 - In a series RLC circuit, setting R = 0 will...Ch. 8 - Prob. 6RQCh. 8 - Refer to the series RLC circuit in Fig. 8.59. What...Ch. 8 - Consider the parallel RLC circuit in Fig. 8.60....Ch. 8 - Match the circuits in Fig. 8.61 with the following...Ch. 8 - Prob. 10RQCh. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.62, find: (a)i(0+) and...Ch. 8 - Using Fig. 8.63, design a problem to help other...Ch. 8 - Refer to the circuit shown in Fig. 8.64....Ch. 8 - In the circuit of Fig. 8.65, find: (a) v(0+) and...Ch. 8 - Refer to the circuit in Fig. 8.66. Determine: (a)...Ch. 8 - In the circuit of Fig. 8.67, find: (a) vR(0+) and...Ch. 8 - A series RLC circuit has R = 20 k, L = 0.2 mH, and...Ch. 8 - Design a problem to help other students better...Ch. 8 - The current in an RLC circuit is described by...Ch. 8 - The differential equation that describes the...Ch. 8 - Prob. 11PCh. 8 - If R = 50 , L = 1.5 H, what value of C will make...Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.68, calculate the value...Ch. 8 - The switch in Fig. 8.69 moves from position A to...Ch. 8 - The responses of a series RLC circuit are...Ch. 8 - Find i(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig. 8.70....Ch. 8 - In the circuit of Fig. 8.71, the switch...Ch. 8 - Find the voltage across the capacitor as a...Ch. 8 - Obtain v(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig. 8.73....Ch. 8 - The switch in the circuit of Fig. 8.74 has been...Ch. 8 - Calculate v(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8 - Assuming R = 2 k, design a parallel RLC circuit...Ch. 8 - For the network in Fig. 8.76, what value of C is...Ch. 8 - The switch in Fig. 8.77 moves from position A to...Ch. 8 - Using Fig. 8.78, design a problem to help other...Ch. 8 - The step response of an RLC circuit is given by...Ch. 8 - Prob. 27PCh. 8 - A series RLC circuit is described by...Ch. 8 - Solve the following differential equations subject...Ch. 8 - Prob. 30PCh. 8 - Consider the circuit in Fig. 8.79. Find vL(0+) and...Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.80, find v(t) for t 0.Ch. 8 - Find v(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig. 8.81.Ch. 8 - Calculate i(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8 - Using Fig. 8.83, design a problem to help other...Ch. 8 - Obtain v(t) and i(t) for t 0 in the circuit of...Ch. 8 - For the network in Fig. 8.85, solve for i(t) for t...Ch. 8 - Refer to the circuit in Fig. 8.86. Calculate i(t)...Ch. 8 - Determine v(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8 - The switch in the circuit of Fig. 8.88 is moved...Ch. 8 - For the network in Fig. 8.89, find i(t) for t 0....Ch. 8 - Given the network in Fig. 8.90, find v(t) for t ...Ch. 8 - The switch in Fig. 8.91 is opened at t = 0 after...Ch. 8 - A series RLC circuit has the following parameters:...Ch. 8 - In the circuit of Fig. 8.92, find v(t) and i(t)...Ch. 8 - Prob. 46PCh. 8 - Find the output voltage vo(t) in the circuit of...Ch. 8 - Given the circuit in Fig. 8.95, find i(t) and v(t)...Ch. 8 - Determine i(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.97, find i(t) for t 0....Ch. 8 - Find v(t) for t 0 in the circuit of Fig. 8.98....Ch. 8 - The step response of a parallel RLC circuit is...Ch. 8 - After being open for a day, the switch in the...Ch. 8 - Using Fig. 8.100, design a problem to help other...Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.101, find v(t) for t 0....Ch. 8 - In the circuit of Fig. 8.102, find i(t) for t 0....Ch. 8 - Given the circuit shown in Fig. 8.103, determine...Ch. 8 - In the circuit of Fig. 8.104, the switch has been...Ch. 8 - The switch in Fig. 8.105 has been in position 1...Ch. 8 - Obtain i1 and i2 for t 0 in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Prob. 8.5, find i and v for t ...Ch. 8 - Find the response vR(t) for t 0 in the circuit of...Ch. 8 - For the op amp circuit in Fig. 8.108, find the...Ch. 8 - Using Fig. 8.109, design a problem to help other...Ch. 8 - Determine the differential equation for the op amp...Ch. 8 - Obtain the differential equations for vo(t) in the...Ch. 8 - In the op amp circuit of Fig. 8.112, determine...Ch. 8 - For the step function vs = u(t), use PSpice or...Ch. 8 - Given the source-free circuit in Fig. 8.114, use...Ch. 8 - For the circuit in Fig. 8.115, use PSpice or...Ch. 8 - Obtain v(t) for 0 t 4 s in the circuit of Fig....Ch. 8 - The switch in Fig. 8.117 has been in position 1...Ch. 8 - Design a problem, to be solved using PSpice or...Ch. 8 - Draw the dual of the circuit shown in Fig. 8.118.Ch. 8 - Obtain the dual of the circuit in Fig. 8.119.Ch. 8 - Find the dual of the circuii in Fig. 8.120.Ch. 8 - Draw the dual of the circuit in Fig. 8.121.Ch. 8 - An automobile airbag igniter is modeled by the...Ch. 8 - A load is modeled as a 100-mH inductor in parallel...Ch. 8 - A mechanical system is modeled by a series RLC...Ch. 8 - An oscillogram can be adequately modeled by a...Ch. 8 - The circuit in Fig. 8.123 is the electrical analog...Ch. 8 - Figure 8.124 shows a typical tunnel-diode...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, electrical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Q2: (30 Marks) Design a DC/DC converter that produce output waveforms that shown in figures below from a fixed DC source of 20 volts. Vo (Volt) 14.1 IL (Amp) 13.9 2.25 1.75 † (msec) Output voltage 0.18 0.2 t (msec) L 0.214 0.22 Output currentarrow_forward6. Build the circuit shown in Figure 2 below in PSpice. Note that the power supply V1 is a VSIN power supply in the SOURCE library. Vcc is a VDC supply found in the SOURCE library. Model this circuit using the Time Domain (Transient) Analysis Type with a Run To Time of 2 ms. A. Paste your output graph showing the voltage at the base terminal, collector terminal and at the load. B. What is the voltage gain of the circuit? (Compare the voltage amplitude at the base terminal input (across Rb2) to that at the collector terminal. C. What happens to the output voltage at the collector terminal if the value of Rb1 is reduced by a factor of 10 (to 14.7 kn)? Simulate this situation and explain the result. D. What happens to the output voltage at the collector terminal if the value of Rb1 is increased by a factor of 3 (to 441 k)? Simulate this situation and explain the result. Rb1 RC 147k 1k C2 C1 Q1 Vcc 1u VOFF = 0 Q2N3904 10Vdc VAMPL = 0.1V1 1u FREQ = 2k R_load Rb2 Re AC = 0 250 40k 20 Figure…arrow_forwardThe input reactance of 1/2 dipole with radius of 1/30 is given as shown in figure below, Assuming the wire of dipole is conductor 5.6*107 S/m, determine at f=1 GHz the a-Loss resistance, b- Radiation efficiency c-Reflection efficiency when the antenna is connected to T.L shown in the figure. Rr Ro= 50 2 1/4 RL -j100 [In(l/a) - 1.5] tan(ẞl)arrow_forward
- 6) For each independent source in this circuit calculate the amount of power being supplied or the amount of power being absorbed + 6V www +3V- www 20 ми ми 352 0.5A + 3Varrow_forward2) A circuit is given as shown (a) Find and label circuit nodes. (b) Determine V, V₂, V₂, I₂ and I. + V₂ 452 m I2 6Ω www 52 t + V + 4A 노동 102 ww 1202 60 www I₂arrow_forwardA Darlington Pair consists of two transistors with the first BJT driving the base terminal of the second transistor as shown in the picture provided. What does the curve trace for a Darlington Pair of Bipolar Junction Transistors look like?arrow_forward
- Provide Pen and paper solution please not using AIarrow_forward5) If the current source supplies 448 watts, then what 15 the value of resistance R? ми R ↑ YA 62 ww 120 } ww 6_02 { wwarrow_forwardWhat is the equivalent resistance of this circuit between terminals A and B ? m 1852 A 7_A 122 도 www 50 ти B ww 36 Ω 201 www www 30√arrow_forward
- 3) A circuit is given as shown. (a) Find and label the circuit nodes. (6) Determine V2, V2, I₂, I₂ and Is © For each circuit element determine how much power it Supplies 15 absorbs. m 20 + 20 www 13 + 20 Z9V H 56 +1 LOV 1/2 1 4A + 3_22 3.2 ми + V₂ I 1arrow_forwardIn this experiment, we are going to use a 2N3904 BJT. Examine the data sheet for this device carefully. In particular, make a note of the current gain (identified by hFE). 1. Obtain the curve trace for a "Darlington Pair" of Bipolar Junction Transistors. A Darlington Pair consists of two transistors with the first BJT driving the base terminal of the second transistor as shown in Figure 1 below. A. Set up the primary sweep voltages for V1 the same as shown in the lecture notes (see the Darlington pair IV curve). B. Set up the secondary sweep currents for 11 to be an order of magnitude smaller than for the single BJT. In the Sweep Type box choose linear and enter the following 3 values: Start Value: 0, End Value: 8u and Increment: 1u (see lecture notes). C. Describe the primary differences you observe between the single BJT Curve Trace and that of the Darlington Pair. Discuss what might cause each difference. Q1 11 Q2 V1 Q2N3904 Figure 1. A Darlington Pair of 2N3904 transistors in a…arrow_forward2. Using the IV plots shown in Fig. 3 (and found in the reintroduction to PSpice) design a BJT biasing circuit that results in the following parameters: VCE = 2 Vand ig = 40 μA. We also require the power supply to be fixed at 5 Volts (this is where the load line intercepts the iB =ic = 0 line). You may use the circuit shown in Example 1. Note that all resistor values in Example 1 must be recalculated. Your solution for the base to ground and base to collector resistors may not be unique.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Introductory Circuit Analysis (13th Edition)Electrical EngineeringISBN:9780133923605Author:Robert L. BoylestadPublisher:PEARSONDelmar's Standard Textbook Of ElectricityElectrical EngineeringISBN:9781337900348Author:Stephen L. HermanPublisher:Cengage LearningProgrammable Logic ControllersElectrical EngineeringISBN:9780073373843Author:Frank D. PetruzellaPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education
- Fundamentals of Electric CircuitsElectrical EngineeringISBN:9780078028229Author:Charles K Alexander, Matthew SadikuPublisher:McGraw-Hill EducationElectric Circuits. (11th Edition)Electrical EngineeringISBN:9780134746968Author:James W. Nilsson, Susan RiedelPublisher:PEARSONEngineering ElectromagneticsElectrical EngineeringISBN:9780078028151Author:Hayt, William H. (william Hart), Jr, BUCK, John A.Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780133923605/9780133923605_smallCoverImage.gif)
Introductory Circuit Analysis (13th Edition)
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780133923605
Author:Robert L. Boylestad
Publisher:PEARSON
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9781337900348/9781337900348_smallCoverImage.jpg)
Delmar's Standard Textbook Of Electricity
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9781337900348
Author:Stephen L. Herman
Publisher:Cengage Learning
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780073373843/9780073373843_smallCoverImage.gif)
Programmable Logic Controllers
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780073373843
Author:Frank D. Petruzella
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780078028229/9780078028229_smallCoverImage.gif)
Fundamentals of Electric Circuits
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780078028229
Author:Charles K Alexander, Matthew Sadiku
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780134746968/9780134746968_smallCoverImage.gif)
Electric Circuits. (11th Edition)
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780134746968
Author:James W. Nilsson, Susan Riedel
Publisher:PEARSON
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780078028151/9780078028151_smallCoverImage.gif)
Engineering Electromagnetics
Electrical Engineering
ISBN:9780078028151
Author:Hayt, William H. (william Hart), Jr, BUCK, John A.
Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,
L21E127 Control Systems Lecture 21 Exercise 127: State-space model of an electric circuit; Author: bioMechatronics Lab;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sL0LtyfNYkM;License: Standard Youtube License