1 / 26

Bruce Mayer, PE Regsitered Electrical & Mechanical Engineer BMayer@ChabotCollege

Engineering 43. Chp 5.4 Maximum Power Transfer. Bruce Mayer, PE Regsitered Electrical & Mechanical Engineer BMayer@ChabotCollege.edu. ReCall Th é venin Equivalent. v TH = Thevenin Equivalent VOLTAGE Source R TH = Thevenin Equivalent SERIES RESISTANCE.

elkan
Download Presentation

Bruce Mayer, PE Regsitered Electrical & Mechanical Engineer BMayer@ChabotCollege

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. Engineering 43 Chp 5.4Maximum PowerTransfer Bruce Mayer, PE Regsitered Electrical & Mechanical EngineerBMayer@ChabotCollege.edu

  2. ReCall Thévenin Equivalent • vTH = Thevenin Equivalent VOLTAGE Source • RTH = Thevenin Equivalent SERIES RESISTANCE • Thevenin Equivalent Circuit for PART A

  3. Recall Norton Equivalent • iN = Norton Equivalent CURRENT Source • RN = Norton Equivalent PARALLEL RESISTANCE • Norton Equivalent Circuit for PART A

  4. Recognize Mixed sources Must Compute Open Circuit Voltage, VOC, and Short Circuit Current, ISC The Open Ckt Voltage Example • Solve for VTH • Use V-Divider to Find VX • The Short Ckt Current • Note that Shorting a-to-b Results in a Single Large Node • For Vb Use KVL • Now VTH = Vx - Vb

  5. Need to Find Vx Single node Example cont • KCL at Single Node • Then RTH • Solving For Vx • The Equivalent Circuit • KCL at Node-b for ISC

  6. Using Excel Spreadsheet Numerical Analysis • Short INDEPENDENT Sources to Find RTH • And VOC by 12V Source and V-Divider for V across RX

  7. Numerical Analysis - Plot

  8. Numerical Analysis - Limits

  9. ENGR43_Chp5_Rth_Voc_Analysis_MATLAB_0602.m Plot using MATLAB Script File % ENGR43_Chp5_Rth_Voc_Analysis_MATLAB_0602.m % Bruce Mayer, PE % ENGR43 * 27Feb06 % Rx = [0:0.1:20]'; %define the range of resistors to use Voc = 12-6*Rx./(Rx+4); %the formula for Voc. Notice "./" Rth = 4*Rx./(4+Rx); %formula for Thevenin resistance. plot(Rx,Voc,'bx', Rx,Rth,'mv') title('USING MATLAB'), grid, xlabel('Rx (kOhm)'), ylabel('Voc (V), Rth (kOhm)') legend('Voc [V]','Rth [kOhm]')

  10. Typical Interpretation Looks Like Series Resistance Thevenin Theorem – General View • The General View

  11. Thevenin General - Comments • VTH Becomes the Sole Equivalent Power Source/Sink for the “Part-A” (a.k.a. Driving) Circuit • It’s Value is Set to Maintain The Open Ckt Voltage at vo • This Interpretation Applies Even When The Passive Elements Include INDUCTORS and CAPACITORS

  12. Amplifier Driving Speaker • Consider an Amplifier Circuit connected to a Speaker Speakera.k.a. the“LOAD” DrivingCircuita.k.a. the“SOURCE”

  13. Thévenin’s Equivalent Circuit Theorem Allows Tremendous Simplification of the Amp Ckt Circuit Simplification R S Thevenin + V S 

  14. Consider The Amp-Speaker Matching Issue From PreAmp (voltage ) To speakers Maximum Power Transfer

  15. The Simplest Model for a Speaker is to Consider it as a RESISTOR only BASIC MODEL FOR THE ANALYSIS OF POWER TRANSFER Maximum Power Xfer Cont • Since the “Load” Does the “Work” We Would like to Transfer the Maximum Amount of Power from the “Driving Ckt” to the Load • Anything Less Results in Lost Energy in the Driving Ckt in the form of Heat

  16. Consider Thevenin Equivalent Ckt with Load RL Find Load Pwr by V-Divider Maximum Power Transfer • Consider PL as a FUNCTION of RL and find the maximum of such a function  have at left! • i.e., Take 1st Derivative and Set to Zero • For every choice of RL we have a different power. • How to find the MAXIMUM Power value?

  17. Find Max Power Condition Using Differential Calculus Max Power Xfer cont • Set The Derivative To Zero To Find MAX or MIN Points • For this Case Set To Zero The NUMERATOR • Solving for “Best” (max) Load • This is The Maximum Power Transfer Theorem • The load that maximizes the power transfer for a circuit is equal to the Thevenin equivalent resistanceof the circuit

  18. By Calculus we Know RL for PL,max Max Power Quantified • Sub RTH for RL • Recall the Power Transfer Eqn • So Finally

  19. Determine RL for Maximum Power Transfer Need to Find RTH Notice This Ckt Contains Only INDEPENDENT Sources a b Max Pwr Xfer Example • Thus RTH BySource Deactivation • To Find the AMOUNT of Power Transferred Need the Thevenin Voltage • Then use RTH = 6kΩalong with VTH • This is Then the RL For Max Power Transfer

  20. To Find VTH Use Meshes The Eqns for Loops 1 & 2 Max Pwr Xfer Example cont • Solving for I2 • Recall • At Max: PL = PMX, RL = RTH • Now Apply KVL for VOC

  21. Determine RL and Max Power Transferred Find Thevenin Equiv.At This Terminal-Set a c b d Max Pwr Xfer • Use Loop Analysis • Recall for Max Pwr Xfer • This is a MIXED Source Circuit • Analysis Proceeds More Quickly if We start at c-d and Adjust for the 4kΩ at the end • Eqns for Loops 1 & 2

  22. The Controlling Variable c a d b Max Pwr Xfer cont • Remember now the partition points • Now Short Ckt Current • The Added Wire Shorts the 2k Resistor • The RTH for ckt at a-b = 2kΩ+4kΩ; So • Then RTH

  23. Independent Sources Only RTH = RN by Source Deactivation VTH = VOC or = RN·ISC IN = ISC or = VOC/RTH Mixed INdep and Dep Srcs Must Keep Indep & dep Srcs Together in Driving Ckt VTH = VOC IN = ISC RTH = RN= VOC/ ISC Thevenin & Norton Summary • DEPENDENT Sources Only • Must Apply V or I PROBE • Pick One, say IP = 1.00 mA, then Calculate the other, say VP • VTH = IN = 0 • RTH = RN= VP/ IP

  24. WhiteBoard Work • Let’s Work Problem 5.109 • Find Pmax for Load RL

  25. What’s an “Algorithm” • A postage stamp issued by the USSR in 1983 to commemorate the 1200th anniversary of Muhammad al-Khowarizmi, after whom algorithms are named.

More Related