JoVE Logo

로그인

The superposition principle is a fundamental concept stating that in a linear circuit, the voltage across (or current through) an element can be determined by summing the individual contributions of each independent source acting in isolation. When dealing with linear circuits containing multiple independent sources, this principle serves as a valuable tool for analysis. To apply the superposition principle effectively, one should focus on a single independent source at a time while deactivating all others. This approach yields the output (voltage or current) resulting from the active source.

The cumulative effect of all active sources can then be determined by algebraically adding their individual contributions. This simplifies the circuit analysis process. Notably, dependent sources remain unaffected as they are governed by circuit variables. It is worth noting that utilizing the superposition principle can lead to increased analytical effort. For example, when dealing with a circuit featuring three independent sources, one must analyze three separate, simplified circuits, each representing the contribution of an individual source. Despite this potential drawback, the superposition principle remains a valuable technique for simplifying complex circuits by replacing voltage sources with short circuits and current sources with open circuits.

Tags

Superposition TheoremLinear CircuitVoltageCurrentIndependent SourceCircuit AnalysisActive SourceCumulative EffectDependent SourcesAnalytical EffortSimplified CircuitsVoltage SourcesCurrent Sources

장에서 2:

article

Now Playing

2.7 : Superposition Theorem

DC Circuit Analysis

475 Views

article

2.1 : Nodal Analysis

DC Circuit Analysis

731 Views

article

2.2 : Nodal Analysis with Voltage Sources

DC Circuit Analysis

877 Views

article

2.3 : Mesh Analysis

DC Circuit Analysis

459 Views

article

2.4 : Mesh Analysis with Current Sources

DC Circuit Analysis

1.2K Views

article

2.5 : Source Transformation

DC Circuit Analysis

2.5K Views

article

2.6 : Linear Circuits

DC Circuit Analysis

352 Views

article

2.8 : Thevinin's Theorem

DC Circuit Analysis

354 Views

article

2.9 : Norton's Theorem

DC Circuit Analysis

431 Views

article

2.10 : Maximum Power Transfer

DC Circuit Analysis

180 Views

article

2.11 : Design Example: Strain Gauge Bridge or Wheatstone Bridge

DC Circuit Analysis

292 Views

JoVE Logo

개인 정보 보호

이용 약관

정책

연구

교육

JoVE 소개

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. 판권 소유