1 / 35

Formulation of Circuit Equations

Formulation of Circuit Equations. Lecture 2 Alessandra Nardi. Thanks to Prof. Sangiovanni-Vincentelli and Prof. Newton. 219A: Course Overview. Fundamentals of Circuit Simulation Approximately 12 lectures Analog Circuits Simulation  Approximately 4 lectures Digital Systems Verification 

amiel
Download Presentation

Formulation of Circuit Equations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Formulation of Circuit Equations Lecture 2 Alessandra Nardi Thanks to Prof. Sangiovanni-Vincentelli and Prof. Newton

  2. 219A: Course Overview • Fundamentals of Circuit Simulation • Approximately 12 lectures • Analog Circuits Simulation  • Approximately 4 lectures • Digital Systems Verification  • Approximately 3 lectures • Physical Issues Verification  • Approximately 6 lectures E.g.: SPICE, HSPICE, PSPICE, SPECTRE, ELDO ….

  3. SPICE historyProf. Pederson with “a cast of thousands” • 1969-70: Prof. Roher and a class project • CANCER: Computer Analysis of Nonlinear Circuits, Excluding Radiation • 1970-72: Prof. Roher and Nagel • Develop CANCER into a truly public-domain, general-purpose circuit simulator • 1972: SPICE I released as public domain • SPICE: Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis • 1975: Cohen following Nagel research • SPICE 2A released as public domain • 1976 SPICE 2D New MOS Models • 1979 SPICE 2E Device Levels (R. Newton appears) • 1980 SPICE 2G Pivoting (ASV appears)

  4. Circuit Input and setup Simulator: Solve dx/dt=f(x) numerically Output Circuit Simulation Types of analysis: • DC Analysis • DC Transfer curves • Transient Analysis • AC Analysis, Noise, Distorsion, Sensitivity

  5. Program Structure (a closer look) Input and setup Models • Numerical Techniques: • Formulation of circuit equations • Solution of linear equations • Solution of nonlinear equations • Solution of ordinary differential equations Output

  6. Formulation of Circuit Equations Set of equations Circuit with B branches N nodes Simulator Set of unknowns

  7. Formulation of Circuit Equations • Unknowns • B branch currents (i) • N node voltages (e) • B branch voltages (v) • Equations • N+B Conservation Laws • B Constitutive Equations

  8. Branch Constitutive Equations (BCE) • Determined by the mathematical model of the electrical behavior of a component • Example: V=R·I • In most of circuit simulators this mathematical model is expressed in terms of ideal elements

  9. Two-port Two-terminal + i1 + v i v1 i1 _ _ i2 + v2 i2 _ Ideal Elements: Reference Direction Branch voltages and currents are measured according to the associated reference directions • Also define a reference node (ground)

  10. Branch Constitutive Equations (BCE) Ideal elements

  11. Conservation Laws • Determined by the topology of the circuit • Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law (KVL): Every circuit node has a unique voltage with respect to the reference node. The voltage across a branch eb is equal to the difference between the positive and negative referenced voltages of the nodes on which it is incident • Kirchhoff’s Current Law (KCL): The algebraic sum of all the currents flowing out of (or into) any circuit node is zero.

  12. R3 1 2 Is5 R1 R4 G2v3 0 Equation Formulation - KCL A i = 0 N equations Kirchhoff’s Current Law (KCL)

  13. R3 1 2 Is5 R1 R4 G2v3 0 Equation Formulation - KVL v - AT e = 0 B equations Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law (KVL)

  14. R3 1 2 Is5 R1 R4 G2v3 0 Equation Formulation - BCE Kvv + i = is B equations

  15. branches 1 2 3 j B n o d e s 1 2 i N (+1, -1, 0) { +1 if node i is terminal + of branch j -1 if node i is terminal - of branch j 0 if node i is not connected to branch j Aij = Equation FormulationNode-Branch Incidence Matrix • PROPERTIES • A is unimodular • 2 nonzero entries in each column

  16. Equation Assembly (Stamping Procedures) • Different ways of combining Conservation Laws and Constitutive Equations • Sparse Table Analysis (STA) • Brayton, Gustavson, Hachtel • Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA) • McCalla, Nagel, Roher, Ruehli, Ho

  17. Sparse Tableau Analysis (STA) • Write KCL: Ai=0 (N eqns) • Write KVL: v -ATe=0 (B eqns) • Write BCE: Kii + Kvv=S (B eqns) N+2B eqns N+2B unknowns N = # nodes B = # branches Sparse Tableau

  18. Sparse Tableau Analysis (STA) Advantages • It can be applied to any circuit • Eqns can be assembled directly from input data • Coefficient Matrix is very sparse Problem Sophisticated programming techniques and data structures are required for time and memory efficiency

  19. Nodal Analysis (NA) 1. Write KCL A·i=0 (N eqns, B unknowns) 2. Use BCE to relate branch currents to branch voltages i=f(v) (B unknowns  B unknowns) • Use KVL to relate branch voltages to node voltages • v=h(e) (B unknowns  N unknowns) N eqns N unknowns Yne=ins N = # nodes Nodal Matrix

  20. 1 2 Is5 R1 R4 G2v3 0 Nodal Analysis - Example R3 • KCL: Ai=0 • BCE: Kvv + i = is i = is - Kvv  A Kvv = A is • KVL: v = ATe  A KvATe = A is Yne = ins

  21. Nodal Analysis • Example shows NA may be derived from STA • Better: Yn may be obtained by direct inspection (stamping procedure) • Each element has an associated stamp • Yn is the composition of all the elements’ stamps

  22. N+ N+ N- N+ N- i Rk N- Nodal Analysis – Resistor “Stamp” Spice input format: Rk N+ N- Rkvalue What if a resistor is connected to ground? …. Only contributes to the diagonal KCL at node N+ KCL at node N-

  23. N+ NC+ NC+ NC- N+ N- Gkvc N- NC- Nodal Analysis – VCCS “Stamp” Spice input format: Gk N+ N- NC+ NC- Gkvalue + vc - KCL at node N+ KCL at node N-

  24. N+ N- Nodal Analysis – Current source “Stamp” Spice input format: Ik N+ N- Ikvalue N+ N- N+ N- Ik

  25. Nodal Analysis (NA) Advantages • Yn is often diagonally dominant and symmetric • Eqns can be assembled directly from input data • Yn has non-zero diagonal entries • Yn is sparse (not as sparse as STA) and smaller than STA: NxN compared to (N+2B)x(N+2B) Limitations • Conserved quantity must be a function of node variable • Cannot handle floating voltage sources, VCVS, CCCS, CCVS

  26. Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA) How do we deal with independent voltage sources? • ikl cannot be explicitly expressed in terms of node voltages  it has to be added as unknown (new column) • ek and el are not independent variables anymore  a constraint has to be added (new row) Ekl k l + - k l ikl

  27. Ek + - N+ N- ik RHS N+ N- N+ N- Branch k ik MNA – Voltage Source “Stamp” Spice input format: ESk N+ N- Ekvalue

  28. Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA) How do we deal with independent voltage sources? Augmented nodal matrix In general: Some branch currents

  29. MNA – General rules • A branch current is always introduced as and additional variable for a voltage source or an inductor • For current sources, resistors, conductors and capacitors, the branch current is introduced only if: • Any circuit element depends on that branch current • That branch current is requested as output

  30. MNA – CCCS and CCVS “Stamp”

  31. ES6 - + 3 2 R8 R1 MNA – An example 1 Is5 R4 G2v3 - + 0 4 E7v3 Step 1: Write KCL i1 + i2 + i3 = 0 (1) -i3 + i4 - i5 - i6 = 0 (2) i6 + i8 = 0 (3) i7 – i8 = 0 (4)

  32. MNA – An example Step 2: Use branch equations to eliminate as many branch currents as possible 1/R1·v1 + G2 ·v3 + 1/R3·v3 = 0 (1) - 1/R3·v3 + 1/R4·v4 - i6 = is5 (2) i6 + 1/R8·v8 = 0 (3) i7 – 1/R8·v8 = 0 (4) Step 3: Write down unused branch equations v6 = ES6 (b6) v7 – E7·v3 = 0 (b7)

  33. MNA – An example Step 4: Use KVL to eliminate branch voltages from previous equations 1/R1·e1 + G2·(e1-e2) + 1/R3·(e1-e2) = 0 (1) - 1/R3·(e1-e2) + 1/R4·e2 - i6 = is5 (2) i6 + 1/R8·(e3-e4) = 0 (3) i7 – 1/R8·(e3-e4) = 0 (4) (e3-e2) = ES6 (b6) e4 – E7·(e1-e2) = 0 (b7)

  34. MNA – An example

  35. Modified Nodal Analysis (MNA) Advantages • MNA can be applied to any circuit • Eqns can be assembled directly from input data • MNA matrix is close to Yn Limitations • Sometimes we have zeros on the main diagonal and principle minors may also be singular.

More Related