Sign In

In the realm of AC circuits, passive circuit elements like resistors, inductors, and capacitors take on a different character when characterized by phasor voltage and current. Their behavior is expressed through impedance, a vital concept in AC circuit analysis.

Impedance is a measure of resistance to sinusoidal current flow in an AC circuit. Unlike their behavior in DC circuits, where inductors appear as short circuits and capacitors as open circuits, the behavior of these components in AC circuits is frequency-dependent. At high frequencies, inductors act as open circuits, while capacitors become short circuits.

Impedance is a complex quantity with a real part denoting resistance and an imaginary part representing reactance. Reactance can be either positive or negative, indicating inductive impedance when current lags behind voltage and capacitive impedance when current leads voltage. Impedance can also be represented in polar form, highlighting its magnitude and phase angle.

Equation1

Equation2

The reciprocal of impedance is admittance, which is measured in Siemens (S). Admittance represents the ease with which current flows through a circuit. It comprises conductance (real part) and susceptance (imaginary part). Admittance, like impedance, is a valuable tool in AC circuit analysis, enabling engineers to understand and manipulate electrical circuits operating under sinusoidal conditions.

Tags

ImpedanceAdmittanceAC CircuitsPassive Circuit ElementsResistorsInductorsCapacitorsPhasor VoltagePhasor CurrentFrequency dependent BehaviorReactanceComplex QuantityPolar FormMagnitudePhase AngleConductanceSusceptance

From Chapter 6:

article

Now Playing

6.7 : Impedances and Admittance

AC Circuit Analysis

505 Views

article

6.1 : Sinusoidal Sources

AC Circuit Analysis

374 Views

article

6.2 : Graphical and Analytic Representation of Sinusoids

AC Circuit Analysis

339 Views

article

6.3 : Phasors

AC Circuit Analysis

431 Views

article

6.4 : Phasor Arithmetics

AC Circuit Analysis

192 Views

article

6.5 : Phasor Relationships for Circuit Elements

AC Circuit Analysis

418 Views

article

6.6 : Kirchoff's Laws using Phasors

AC Circuit Analysis

329 Views

article

6.8 : Impedance Combination

AC Circuit Analysis

265 Views

article

6.9 : Node Analysis for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

246 Views

article

6.10 : Mesh Analysis for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

300 Views

article

6.11 : Source Transformation for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

435 Views

article

6.12 : Thévenin Equivalent Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

134 Views

article

6.13 : Norton Equivalent Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

287 Views

article

6.14 : Superposition Theorem for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

537 Views

article

6.15 : Op Amp AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

141 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved