Chapter 8: Series-Parallel Circuits
Understanding Complex Circuit
Topologies
Most real-world circuits are
neither purely series nor purely parallel — they are combinations of both,
known as series-parallel circuits. Analyzing these circuits requires the
systematic application of series and parallel resistance reduction techniques
until the circuit is simplified to a single equivalent resistance.
The approach is to identify
portions of the circuit that are clearly in series (same current) or clearly in
parallel (same voltage), simplify each, and repeat until the circuit reduces to
a single equivalent.
Step-by-Step Analysis Method
Step 1: Redraw the circuit
clearly, labeling all nodes and components.
Step 2: Identify parallel
groups. Combine parallel resistors using the parallel resistance formula.
Step 3: Re-examine the
simplified circuit. Combine any series resistors.
Step 4: Repeat steps 2 and 3
until a single R_T is obtained.
Step 5: Calculate total current:
I_T = V_S / R_T
Step 6: Work backwards through
the circuit, applying Ohm's Law and KVL/KCL to find voltages and currents at
each node and branch.
Wheatstone Bridge — A Classic
Series-Parallel Application
The Wheatstone Bridge is a
circuit of four resistors arranged in a diamond configuration, used for precise
resistance measurement. Two resistors are known, one is variable (adjusted
until balance is achieved), and one is the unknown. At bridge balance, no
current flows through the center galvanometer, and the unknown resistance is
calculated from the ratio of the known resistors.
The Wheatstone Bridge principle
is the foundation of many sensor measurement circuits including load cells,
strain gauges, and precision temperature sensors (RTDs).
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