Electrical Fundamentals: DC Circuits and Resistance Glossary
Electrical Fundamentals: DC Circuits and Resistance Glossary
Electrical
Fundamentals
DC Circuits and Resistance Glossary
Alternating current — A flow of quantity of electrically charged particles. watt-seconds or kilowatt-hours.
charged particles through a conductor, One coulomb is equal to 6.25 × 1018 elec- Joule — Measure of a quantity of
first in one direction, then in the other trons. energy. One joule is defined as one new-
direction. Direct current — A flow of charged ton (a measure of force) acting over a dis-
Ampere — A measure of flow of particles through a conductor in one direc- tance of one meter.
charged particles per unit time. One tion only. Ohm — Unit of resistance. One ohm is
ampere represents one coulomb of charge EMF — Electromotive Force is the defined as the resistance that will allow
flowing past a point in one second. term used to define the force of attraction one ampere of current when one volt of
Atom — The smallest particle of mat- between two points of different charge EMF is impressed across the resistance.
ter that makes up an element. Consists of potential. Also called voltage. Power — Power is the rate at which
protons and neutrons in the central area Energy — Capability of doing work. It work is done. One watt of power is equal
called the nucleus, with electrons sur- is usually measured in electrical terms as to one volt of EMF, causing a current of
rounding this central region. the number of watts of power consumed one ampere through a resistor.
Coulomb — A unit of measure of a during a specific period of time, such as Volt — A measure of electromotive force.
Introduction
The DC Circuits and Resistance section number of negative ions (or electrons) in proper polarity sign for many electronics
of this chapter was written by Roger Tay- another location, there is an attractive calculations. Conventional current is used
lor, K9ALD. force between the two collections of par- in much of the technical literature. The
The atom is the primary building block ticles. That force tries to pull the collec- arrows in semiconductor schematic sym-
of the universe. The main parts of the atom tions together. This attraction is called bols point in the direction of conventional
include protons, electrons and neutrons. electromotive force, or EMF. current, for example.
Protons have a positive electrical charge, If there is no path (conductor) to allow To measure the quantities of charge,
electrons a negative charge and neutrons electric charge to flow between the current and force, certain definitions have
have no electrical charge. All atoms are two locations, the charges cannot move been adopted. Charge is measured in cou-
electrically neutral, so they have the same together and neutralize one another. If a lombs. One coulomb is equal to 6.25 × 1018
number of electrons as protons. If an atom conductor is provided, then electric cur- electrons (or protons). Charge flow is
loses electrons, so it has more protons than rent (usually electrons) will flow through measured in amperes. One ampere repre-
electrons, it has a net positive charge. If an the conductor. sents one coulomb of charge flowing past
atom gains electrons, so it has more elec- Electrons move from the negative to the a point in one second. Electromotive force
trons than protons, it has a negative positive side of the voltage, or EMF is measured in volts. One volt is defined as
charge. Particles with a positive or nega- source. Conventional current has the the potential force (electrical) between
tive charge are called ions. Free electrons opposite direction, from positive to nega- two points for which one ampere of cur-
are also called ions, because they have a tive. This comes from an arbitrary deci- rent will do one joule (measure of energy)
negative charge. sion made by Benjamin Franklin in the of work flowing from one point to another.
When there are a surplus number of 18th century. The conventional current (A joule of work per second represents a
positive ions in one location and a surplus direction is important in establishing the power of one watt.)
4.2 Chapter 4
having a resistance less than this value. Fig 4.2 — Examples
(The resistance of #15 wire is given as of various resistors.
At the top left is a
3.1810 Ω / 1000 ft.) Select any wire size
small 10-W
larger than this for the connections in your wirewound resistor.
circuit, to ensure that the total wire resis- A single in-line
tance will be less than 0.05 Ω. package (SIP) of
When the wire in question is not made resistors is at the top
of copper, the resistance values in the wire right. At the top
center is a small PC-
table should be multiplied by the ratios board-mount
shown in Table 4.1 to obtain the resulting variable resistor. A
resistance. If the wire in the first example tiny surface-mount
were made from nickel instead of copper, (chip) resistor is also
the length required for 3.5 Ω would be: shown at the top.
Below the variable
R DESIRED resistor is a 1-W
Length carbon compo-sition
R WIRE (6) resistor and then a ½-W composition unit. The
1000 ft dog-bone-shaped resistors at the bottom are ½-W
and ¼-W film resistors. The ¼-inch-ruled graph
3.5 ȍ paper background provides a size comparison.
66.17 ȍ The inset photo shows the chip resistor with a
u 5.1 penny for size comparison.
1000 ft
3.5 ȍ u1000 ft
66.17 ȍ u 5.1
3500 ft
Length 10.37 ft
337.5 rent through a resistance causes the In addition, special material or construc-
conductor to become heated; the higher tion techniques may be used to provide
TEMPERATURE EFFECTS the resistance and the larger the current, temperature compensation, so the value
The resistance of a conductor changes the greater the amount of heat developed. does not change (or changes in a precise
with its temperature. The resistance of Resistors intended for carrying large cur- manner) as the resistor temperature
practically every metallic conductor rents must be physically large so the heat changes. There is more information about
increases with increasing temperature. can be radiated quickly to the surrounding the electrical characteristics of real resis-
Carbon, however, acts in the opposite air. If the resistor does not dissipate the tors in the Real-World Component
way; its resistance decreases when its tem- heat quickly, it may get hot enough to melt Characteristics chapter.
perature rises. It is seldom necessary to or burn.
consider temperature in making resistance The amount of heat a resistor can safely CONDUCTANCE
calculations for amateur work. The tem- dissipate depends on the material, surface The reciprocal of resistance (1/R) is
perature effect is important when it is nec- area and design. Typical carbon resistors conductance. It is usually represented by
essary to maintain a constant resistance used in amateur electronics ( 1/8 to 2-W the symbol G. A circuit having high con-
under all conditions, however. Special resistors) depend primarily on the surface ductance has low resistance, and vice
materials that have little or no change in area of the case, with some heat also being versa. In radio work, the term is used
resistance over a wide temperature range carried off through the connecting leads. chiefly in connection with electron-tube
are used in that case. Wirewound resistors are usually used for and field-effect transistor characteristics.
higher power levels. Some have finned The unit of conductance is the siemens,
RESISTORS cases for better convection cooling and/or abbreviated S. A resistance of 1 Ω has a
A package of material exhibiting a cer- metal cases for better conductive cooling. conductance of 1 S, a resistance of 1000 Ω
tain amount of resistance, made up into a In some circuits, the resistor value may has a conductance of 0.001 S, and so on. A
single unit is called a resistor. Different be critical. In this case, precision resistors unit frequently used in connection with
resistors having the same resistance value are used. These are typically wirewound, electron devices is the μS or one millionth
may be considerably different in physical or carbon-film devices whose values are of a siemens. It is the conductance of a
size and construction (see Fig 4.2). Cur- carefully controlled during manufacture. 1-MΩ resistance.
4.4 Chapter 4
– sign to power sinks. This means the volt- This resistance in series with R1 forms E
I (12)
ages across the resistors have the opposite a simple series circuit, as shown in Fig R1 R2
sign from the battery voltage. Adding all 4.6B. The total resistance in the circuit is:
the voltages yields zero. In the case of a and the voltage between terminals A and
single voltage source, algebraic manipula- R TOTAL R1 R EQ 5.00 kȍ 5.71 kȍ B (EAB) is:
tion implies that the sum of the individual
voltage drops in the circuit must be equal RTOTAL 10.71kȍ
to the applied voltage. E AB I u R2 (13)
E TOTAL E1 E2 E3 (11) The current is:
By substituting the first equation into
E TOTAL 37.9 V 152 V 60.6 V E 250 V
I 23.3 mA the second, we can find a simplified
R 10.71 kȍ
expression for EAB:
E TOTAL 250 V
(Remember the significant figures rule The voltage drops across R1 and REQ are: R2
E AB uE (14)
for addition.) R1 R2
In problems such as this, when the cur- E1 I u R1 23.3 mA u 5.00 kȍ 117 V
rent is small enough to be expressed in
milliamperes, considerable time and E2 I u R EQ 23.3 mA u 5.71 kȍ 133 V
trouble can be saved if the resistance is
expressed in kilohms rather than in ohms. with sufficient accuracy. These two volt-
When the resistance in kilohms is substi- age drops total 250 V, as described by
tuted directly in Ohm’s Law, the current Kirchhoff’s Current Law. E2 appears
will be milliamperes, if the EMF is in volts. across both R2 and R3 so,
RESISTORS IN SERIES-PARALLEL
A circuit may have resistances both E2 133 V
I2 6.65 mA
in parallel and in series, as shown in R2 20.0 kȍ
Fig 4.6A. The method for analyzing such
a circuit is as follows: Consider R2 and R3 E3 133 V
I3 16.6 mA
to be the equivalent of a single resistor, R3 8.00 kȍ
REQ whose value is equal to R2 and R3 in where:
parallel. I2 = current through R2 and
I3 = current through R3.
R2 u R3 20000 ȍ u 8000 ȍ
R EQ
R2 R3 20000 ȍ 8000 ȍ The sum of I2 and I3 is equal to 23.3 mA,
conforming to Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law.
1.60 u10 8 ȍ 2
28000 ȍ THEVENIN’S THEOREM
Thevenin’s Theorem is a useful tool
R EQ 5710 ȍ 5.71 kȍ for simplifying electrical networks.
Thevenin’s Theorem states that any two-
terminal network of resistors and voltage
or current sources can be replaced by a
single voltage source and a series resistor.
Such a transformation can simplify the
calculation of current through a parallel
branch. Thevenin’s Theorem can be
readily applied to the circuit of Fig 4.6A,
to find the current through R3.
In this example, R1 and R2 form a volt-
age divider circuit, with R3 as the load
(Fig 4.7A). The current drawn by the load
(R3) is simply the voltage across R3,
divided by its resistance. Unfortunately,
the value of R2 affects the voltage across
R3, just as the presence of R3 affects the
potential appearing across R2. Some
means of separating the two is needed;
hence the Thevenin-equivalent circuit. Fig 4.7 — Equivalent circuits for the
The voltage of the Thevenin-equivalent circuit shown in Fig 4.6. A shows the
battery is the open-circuit voltage, mea- load resistor (R3) looking into the
circuit. B shows the Thevenin-
sured when there is no current from either equivalent circuit, with a resistor and a
Fig 4.6 — At A, an example of resistors terminal A or B. Without a load connected voltage source in series. C shows the
in series-parallel. The equivalent circuit between A and B, the total current through Norton-equivalent circuit, with a
is shown at B. See text for calculations. the circuit is (from Ohm’s Law): resistor and current source in parallel.
4.6 Chapter 4
of 20 mA flows through a 300-Ω resistor.
Then: The Ohm’s Law and Power Circle
During the first semester of my Electrical Power Technology program, one of
P I 2 u R 0.020 2 A 2 u 300 ȍ the first challenges issued by our dedicated instructor—Roger Crerie—to his new
freshman students was to identify and develop 12 equations or formulas that
P 0.00040 A 2 u 300 ȍ
could be used to determine voltage, current, resistance and power. Ohm’s Law is
P 0.12 W expressed as
E
R
Note that the current was changed from I
and it provided three of these equation forms while the basic equation relating
milliamperes to amperes before substi-
power to current and voltage (P = I×E) accounted for another three. With six
tution in the formula. known equations, it was just a matter of applying mathematical substitution for his
Electrical power in a resistance is turned students to develop the remaining six. Together, these 12 equations compose the
into heat. The greater the power, the more circle or wheel of voltage (E), current
rapidly the heat is generated. Resistors for (I), resistance (R) and power (P)
radio work are made in many sizes, the shown in Fig A. Just as Roger’s
smallest being rated to dissipate (or carry previous students had learned at the
safely) about 1/16 W. The largest resistors Worcester Industrial Technical Institute
commonly used in amateur equipment will (Worcester, Massachusetts), our Class
dissipate about 100 W. Large resistors, of ’82 now held the basic electrical
such as those used in dummy-load anten- formulas needed to proceed in our
nas, are often cooled with oil to increase studies or professions. As can be seen
their power-handling capability. in Fig A, we can determine any one of
If you want to express power in horse- these four electrical quantities by
power instead of watts, the following rela- knowing the value of any two others.
tionship holds: You may want to keep this page
bookmarked for your reference. You’ll
probably be using many of these
1 horsepower = 746 W (21)
formulas as the years go by—this has
certainly been my experience—Dana
This formula assumes lossless transfor- G. Reed, W1LC, ARRL Handbook
mation; practical efficiency is taken up Fig A—Electrical formulas. Editor
shortly. This formula is especially useful
if you are working with a system that con-
verts electrical energy into mechanical
energy, and vice versa, since mechanical tures are characteristics of resistance, so it PO
power is often expressed in horsepower, Eff (22)
can be said that any device that “dissipates PI
in the US. power” has a definite value of resistance.
This discussion relates to direct current This concept of resistance as something
in resistive circuits. See the AC Theory that absorbs power at a definite voltage- where:
and Reactive Components section of this to-current ratio is very useful; it permits Eff = efficiency (as a decimal)
chapter for a discussion about power in ac substituting a simple resistance for the PO = power output (W)
circuits, including reactive circuits. load or power-consuming part of the PI = power input (W).
device receiving power, often with con- Example: If the dc input to the tube is
GENERALIZED DEFINITION OF siderable simplification of calculations. 100 W, and the RF power output is 60 W,
RESISTANCE Of course, every electrical device has the efficiency is:
Electrical energy is not always turned some resistance of its own in the more
into heat. The energy used in running a narrow sense, so a part of the energy sup- PO 60 W
motor, for example, is converted to plied to it is converted to heat in that resis- Eff 0.6
PI 100 W
mechanical motion. The energy supplied tance even though the major part of the
to a radio transmitter is largely converted energy may be converted to another form.
into radio waves. Energy applied to a loud- Efficiency is usually expressed as a
speaker is changed into sound waves. In EFFICIENCY percentage — that is, it tells what percent
each case, the energy is converted to other In devices such as motors and vacuum of the input power will be available as
forms and can be completely accounted tubes, the objective is to convert the sup- useful output. To calculate percent effi-
for. None of the energy just disappears! plied energy (or power) into some form ciency, just multiply the value from equa-
This is a statement of the Law of Conser- other than heat. Therefore, power con- tion 22 by 100%. The efficiency in the
vation of Energy. When a device converts verted to heat is considered to be a loss, example above is 60%.
energy from one form to another, we often because it is not useful power. The effi- Suppose a mobile transmitter has an RF
say it dissipates the energy, or power. ciency of a device is the useful power out- power output of 100 W with 52% effi-
(Power is energy divided by time.) Of put (in its converted form) divided by the ciency at 13.8 V. The vehicle’s alternator
course the device doesn’t really “use up” power input to the device. In a vacuum- system charges the battery at a 5.0-A rate
the energy, or make it disappear, it just tube transmitter, for example, the objec- at this voltage. Assuming an alternator
converts it to another form. Proper opera- tive is to convert power from a dc source efficiency of 68%, how much horsepower
tion of electrical devices often requires into ac power at some radio frequency. must the engine produce to operate the
that the power must be supplied at a spe- The ratio of the RF power output to the dc transmitter and charge the battery? Solu-
cific ratio of voltage to current. These fea- input is the efficiency of the tube. That is: tion: To charge the battery, the alternator
4.8 Chapter 4
Fig 4.10 — This
photo shows
examples of
various styles
of switches. The
¼-inch-ruled graph
paper background
provides for size
Fig 4.9 — Schematic diagrams of comparison.
various types of switches. A is an
SPST, B is an SPDT, and C is an SPDT
switch with a center-off position.
age the contacts if used to turn off more allowable contact temperature rise. On percentage over the rated value. The melt-
than an ampere or two of dc. larger ac switches, or most dc switches, ing value depends on the type of material,
Switches are normally designated by the interrupt capability may be lower than the shape of the element and the heat dis-
the number of poles (circuits controlled) the current carrying value. sipation capability of the cartridge and
and positions (circuit path choices). The Rotary/wafer switches can provide very holder, among other factors. Some fuses
simplest switch is the on-off switch, which complex switching patterns. Several poles (Slo-blo) are designed to carry an over-
is a single-pole, single-throw (SPST) (separate circuits) can be included on each load for a short period of time. They typi-
switch as shown in Fig 4.9A. The off wafer. Many wafers may be stacked on the cally are used in motor starting and
position does not direct the current to an- same shaft. Not only may many different power-supply circuits that have a large
other circuit. The next step would be to circuits be controlled at once, but by wir- inrush current when first started. Other
change the current path to another path. ing different poles/positions on different fuses are designed to blow very quickly to
This would be a single-pole, double-throw wafers together, a high degree of circuit protect delicate instruments and solid-
(SPDT) switch as shown in Fig 4.9B. Add- switching logic can be developed. Such state circuits. A replacement fuse should
ing an off position would give a single- switches can select different paths as they have the same current rating and the
pole, double-throw, center-off switch as are turned and can also “short” together same characteristics as the fuse it replaces.
shown in Fig 4.9C. successive contacts to connect numbers of Fig 4.11 shows a variety of fuse types and
Several such switches can be “ganged” components or paths. They can also be sizes.
to the same mechanical activator to pro- designed to either break one contact The most important fuse rating is the
vide double pole, triple pole or even more, before making another, or to short two nominal current rating that it will safely
separate control paths all activated at once. contacts together before disconnecting the carry. Next most important are the timing
Switches can be activated in a variety of first one (make before break) to eliminate characteristics, or how quickly it opens
ways. The most common methods include arcing or perform certain logic functions. under a given current overload. A fuse also
lever, push button and rotary switches. In choosing a switch for a particular task, has a voltage rating, both a value in volts
Samples of these are shown in Fig 4.10. consideration should be given to function, and whether it is expected to be used in ac
Most switches stay in the position set, but voltage and current ratings, ease of use, or dc circuits. While you should never
some are spring loaded so they only stay in availability and cost. If a switch is to be substitute a fuse with a higher current rat-
the desired position while held there. These operated frequently, a slightly higher cost ing than the one it replaces, you can use a
are called momentary switches. for a better-quality switch is usually less fuse with a higher voltage rating. There is
Switches typically found in the home costly over the long run. If signal noise or no danger in replacing a 12-V, 2-A fuse
are usually rated for 125 V ac and 15 to contact corrosion is a potential problem, with a 250-V, 2-A unit.
20 A. Switches in cars are usually rated (usually in low-current signal applications) Fuses fail for several reasons. The most
for 12 V dc and several amperes. The it is best to get gold plated contacts. Gold obvious reason is that a problem develops
breakdown voltage rating of a switch, does not oxidize or corrode, thus providing in the circuit, which causes too much cur-
which is usually higher than the interrupt surer contact, which can be particularly rent to flow. In this case, the circuit prob-
rating, primarily depends on the insulat- important at very low signal levels. Gold lem needs to be fixed. A fuse may just fail
ing material surrounding the contacts and plating will not hold up under high-current- eventually, particularly when cycled on
the separation between the contacts. Plas- interrupt applications, however. and off near its current rating. A kind of
tic or phenolic material normally provides metal fatigue sets in, and eventually the
both structural support and insulation. Ce- FUSES fuse goes. A fuse can also blow because of
ramic material may be used to provide Fuses self-destruct to protect circuit a momentary power surge, or even turning
better insulation, particularly in rotary wiring or equipment. The fuse element something on and off several times
(wafer) switches. that melts is a carefully shaped piece of quickly when there is a large inrush cur-
The current carrying capacity of the soft metal, usually mounted in a cartridge rent. In these cases it is only necessary to
switch depends on the contact material and of some kind. The element is designed to replace the fuse with the same type and
size and on the pressure between the con- safely carry a given amount of current and value. Never substitute a fuse with a larger
tacts. It is primarily determined from the to melt at a current value that is a certain current rating. You may cause permanent
4.10 Chapter 4
a volume control. Since the human ear has
a logarithmic response to sound, a volume
control may actually change the volume
(resistance) much more near one end of
the potentiometer than the other (for a
Fig 4.14 — This given amount of rotation) so that the “per-
photo shows ceived” change in volume is about the
examples of same for a similar change in the control.
different styles of This is commonly called an “audio taper”
potentiometers. as the change in resistance per degree of
The ¼ -inch-ruled
graph paper
rotation attempts to match the response of
background the human ear. The taper can be designed
provides a size to match almost any desired control func-
comparison. tion for a given application. Linear and
audio tapers are the most common.
4.12 Chapter 4
wave is vital to digital electronics. The tri- 0.707 times the maximum current. Similar cuits are many and varied. Most can be
angular and ramp waves — sometimes considerations apply to the variation of ac cataloged by reference to ac frequency
called “sawtooth” waves — are especially voltage over time. ranges used in circuits. For example, ac
useful in timing circuits. The sine wave is power used in the home, office and factory
both mathematically and practically the FREQUENCY AND PERIOD is ordinarily 60 Hz in the United States
foundation of all other forms of ac; the With a continuously rotating generator, and Canada. In Great Britain and much of
other forms can usually be reduced to (and alternating current will pass through many Europe, ac power is 50 Hz. For special
even constructed from) a particular col- equal cycles over time. Select an arbitrary purposes, ac power has been generated up
lection of sine waves. point on any one cycle and use it as a to about 400 Hz.
There are numerous ways to generate marker. For this example, the positive peak Sonic and ultrasonic applications of ac
alternating currents: with an ac power gen- will work as an unambiguous marker. The run from about 20 Hz up to several MHz.
erator (an alternator), with a transducer number of times per second that the current Audio work makes use of the lower end of
(for example, a microphone) or with an (or voltage) reaches this positive peak in the sonic spectrum, with communications
electronic circuit (for example, an RF any one second is called the frequency of audio focusing on the range from about
oscillator). The basis of the sine wave is the ac. In other words, frequency expresses 300 to 3000 Hz. High-fidelity audio uses
circular motion, which underlies the most the rate at which current (or voltage) cycles ac circuits capable of handling 20 Hz to at
usual methods of generating alternating occur. The unit of frequency is cycles per least 20 kHz. Ultrasonics — used in medi-
current. The circular motion of the ac gen- second, or hertz—abbreviated Hz (after the cine and industry — makes use of ac cir-
erator may be physical or mechanical, as 19th century radio-phenomena pioneer, cuits above 20 kHz.
in an alternator. Currents in the resonant Heinrich Hertz). Amateur Radio circuits include both
circuit of an oscillator may also produce The length of any cycle in units of time power- and sonic-frequency-range cir-
sine waves without mechanical motion. is the period of the cycle, as measured cuits. Radio communication and other
Fig 4.20 demonstrates the relationship from and to equivalent points on succeed- electronics work, however, require ac cir-
of the current (and voltage) amplitude to ing cycles. Mathematically, the period is cuits capable of operation with frequen-
relative positions of a circular rotation simply the inverse of the frequency. That cies up to the gigahertz range. Some of the
through one complete revolution of 360º. is, applications include signal sources for
Note that the current is zero at point 1. It transmitters (and for circuits inside receiv-
1
rises to its maximum value at a point 90º Frequency (f) in Hz ers); industrial induction heating; dia-
from point 1, which is point 3. At a point Period (T) in seconds thermy; microwaves for cooking, radar and
180º from point 1, which is point 4, the (23) communication; remote control of appli-
current level falls back to zero. Then the and ances, lighting, model planes and boats and
current begins to rise again. The direction 1 other equipment; and radio direction find-
of the current after point 4 and prior to its Period (T) in seconds ing and guidance.
Frequency (f) in Hz
return to point 1, however, is opposite the
direction of current from point 1 to point (24) AC IN CIRCUITS AND
4. Point 2 illustrates one of the innumer- TRANSDUCED ENERGY
able intermediate values of current Example: What is the period of a 400- Alternating currents are often loosely
throughout the cycle. hertz ac current? classified as audio frequency (AF) and
Tracing the rise and fall of current over radio frequency (RF). Although these des-
1 1
a linear time line produces the curve T 0.00250 s 2.5 ms ignations are handy, they actually repre-
accompanying the circle in Fig 4.20. The f 400 Hz sent something other than the electrical
curve is sinusoidal or a sine wave. The The frequency of alternating currents energy of ac circuits: They designate spe-
amplitude of the current varies as the sine used in Amateur Radio circuits varies cial forms of energy that we find useful.
of the angle made by the circular move- from a few hertz, or cycles per second, to Audio or sonic energy is the energy
ment with respect to the zero point. The thousands of millions of hertz. Likewise, imparted by the mechanical movement of a
sine of 90° is 1, and 90° is also the point of the period of alternating currents amateurs medium, which can be air, metal, water or
maximum current (along with 270°). The use ranges from significant fractions of a even the human body. Sound that humans
sine of 45° (point 2) is 0.707, and the value second down to nanoseconds or smaller. can hear normally requires the movement
of current at the 45° point of rotation is In order to express units of frequency, time of air between 20 Hz and 20 kHz, although
and almost everything else in electronics the human ear loses its ability to detect the
compactly, a standard system of prefixes extremes of this range as we age. Some
is used. In magnitudes of 1000 or 103, fre- animals, such as elephants, can apparently
quency is measurable in hertz, in kilohertz detect air vibrations well below 20 Hz,
(1000 hertz or kHz), in megahertz (1 mil- while others, such as dogs and cats, can
lion hertz or MHz), gigahertz (1 billion detect air vibrations well above 20 kHz.
hertz or GHz) and even in tera-hertz (1 Electrical circuits do not directly pro-
trillion hertz or THz). For units smaller duce air vibrations. Sound production
than one, as in the measurement of period, requires a transducer, a device to trans-
the basic unit seconds can become milli- form one form of energy into another form
seconds (1 thousandth of a second or ms), of energy; in this case electrical energy
microseconds (1 millionth of a second or into sonic energy. The speaker and the
μs), nanoseconds (1 billionth of a second microphone are the most common audio
Fig 4.20 — The relationship of circular
motion and the resultant graph of ac or ns) and picoseconds (1 trillionth of a transducers. There are numerous ultra-
current or voltage. The curve is second or ps). sonic transducers for various applications.
sinusoidal, a sine wave. The uses of ac in Amateur Radio cir- Likewise, converting electrical energy
4.14 Chapter 4
to treat each cycle as a complete time unit just reaches its maximum value.
that we divide into 360°. The conventional In Part B, lines A and B are 180° out of
starting point for counting degrees is the phase. In this case, it does not matter
zero point as the voltage or current begins which one is considered to lead or lag.
the positive half cycle. The essential ele- Line B is always positive while line A is
ments of an ac cycle appear in Fig 4.21. negative, and vice versa. If the two wave-
The advantage of treating the ac cycle in forms are of two voltages or two currents
this way is that many calculations and in the same circuit and if they have the
measurements can be taken and recorded same amplitude, they will cancel each
in a manner that is independent of other completely.
frequency. The positive peak voltage or
current occurs at 90° along the cycle. Rela- MEASURING AC VOLTAGE,
tive to the starting point, 90° is the phase CURRENT AND POWER
Fig 4.21 — An ac cycle is divided into of the ac at that point. Thus, a complete
360° that are used as a measure of time Measuring the voltage or current in a dc
description of an ac voltage or current
or phase. circuit is straightforward, as Fig 4.24A
involves reference to three properties: fre-
demonstrates. Since the current flows in
quency, amplitude and phase.
only one direction, for a resistive load, the
Phase relationships also permit the com-
voltage and current have constant values
parison of two ac voltages or currents at
until the circuit components change.
the same frequency, as Fig 4.22 demon-
Fig 4.24B illustrates a perplexing prob-
strates. Since B crosses the zero point in
the positive direction after A has already lem encountered when measuring voltages
done so, there is a phase difference and currents in ac circuits. The current and
between the two waves. In the example, B voltage continuously change direction and
lags A by 45°, or A leads B by 45°. If A value. Which values are meaningful? In
and B occur in the same circuit, their com- fact, several values of constant sine-wave
posite waveform will also be a sine wave voltage and current in ac circuits are
at an intermediate phase angle relative to important to differing applications and
each. Adding any number of sine waves of concerns.
the same frequency always results in a sine
Fig 4.22 — When two waves of the Instantaneous Voltage and Current
wave at that frequency.
same frequency start their cycles at Fig 4.25 shows a sine wave of some
slightly different times, the time Fig 4.22 might equally apply to a volt-
difference or phase difference is age and a current measured in the same ac arbitrary frequency and amplitude with
measured in degrees. In this drawing, circuit. Either A or B might represent the respect to either voltage or current. The
wave B starts 45° (one-eighth cycle) voltage; that is, in some instances voltage instantaneous voltage (or current) at point
later than wave A, and so lags 45° will lead the current and in others voltage A on the curve is a function of three fac-
behind A. tors: the maximum value of voltage (or
will lag the current.
Two important special cases appear in current) along the curve (point B), the fre-
Fig 4.23. In Part A, line B lags 90° behind quency of the wave, and the time elapsed
line A. Its cycle begins exactly one quarter in seconds or fractions of a second. Thus,
cycle later than the A cycle. When one
wave is passing through zero, the other E inst E max sin (2ʌft) ș (31)
Ppk
Pave (35)
2
Since a circuit with a constant resistance
is linear — that is, raising or lowering the
voltage will raise or lower the current pro-
portionally — the voltage and current
values needed to arrive at average ac power
are related to their peak values by the
factor.
E pk E pk
E RMS E pk u 0.707 (36)
2 1.414
Fig 4.25 — Two cycles of a sine wave to illustrate instantaneous, peak, and peak-
to-peak ac voltage and current values. I pk I pk
I RMS I pk u 0.707 (37)
2 1.414
Considering just one sine wave, inde- E P P 2E pk (34) In the time domain of a sine wave, the
pendent of frequency, the instantaneous RMS values of voltage and current occur
value of voltage (or current) becomes Amplifying devices often specify their at the 45°, 135°, 225° and 315° points
input limits in terms of peak-to-peak volt- along the cycle shown in Fig 4.26. (The
E inst E max sin ș (32) ages. Operational amplifiers, which have sine of 45° is approximately 0.707.) The
almost unlimited gain potential, often absolute instantaneous value of voltage or
where θ is the angle in degrees through require input-level limiting to prevent the current is greater than the RMS value for
which the voltage has moved over time output signals from distorting if they half the cycle and less than the RMS value
after the beginning of the cycle. exceed the peak-to-peak output rating of for half the cycle.
Example: What is the instantaneous the devices. The RMS values of voltage and current
value of voltage at point D in Fig 4.25, if get their name from the means used to
the maximum voltage value is 120 V and RMS Voltages and Currents derive their value relative to peak voltage
the angular travel is 60.0°? The root mean square or RMS values of and current. Square the individual values
E inst 120 V u sin 60.0q voltage and current are the most common of all the instantaneous values of voltage
values encountered in electronics. Some- or current in a single cycle of ac. Take the
120 u 0.866 104 V times called the effective values of ac volt- average of these squares and then find the
age and current, they are based upon square root of the average. This root mean
Peak and Peak-to-Peak Voltage equating the values of ac and dc power square procedure produces the RMS value
and Current required to heat a resistive element to of voltage or current.
The most important instantaneous volt- exactly the same temperature. The peak ac If the RMS voltage is the peak voltage
ages and currents are the maximum or power required for this condition is twice divided by the 2 , then the peak voltage
peak values reached on each positive and the dc power needed. Therefore, the aver- must be the RMS voltage multiplied by
negative half cycle of the sine wave. In
Fig 4.25, points B and C represent the
positive and negative peaks of voltage or
current. Peak (pk) values are especially
important with respect to component rat-
ings, which the voltage or current in a cir-
cuit must not exceed without danger of
component failure.
The peak power in an ac circuit is sim-
ply the product of the peak voltage and the
peak current, or
Ppk E pk u I pk (33)
4.16 Chapter 4
Table 4.4
Conversion Factors for AC Voltage or Current
From To Multiply By
Peak Peak-to-Peak 2
Peak-to-Peak Peak 0.5
Peak RMS 1/ 2 or 0.707
RMS Peak 2 or 1.414
Fig 4.27 — The peak envelope voltage
Peak-to-Peak RMS 1 / (2 × (PEV) for a composite waveform.
2 ) or 0.35355
RMS Peak-to-Peak 2× 2 or 2.828
Peak Average 2 / π or 0.6366
Average Peak π / 2 or 1.5708
RMS Average (2 × 2 ) / π or 0.90 Complex Waves and Peak-
Envelope Values
Average RMS π / (2 × 2 ) or 1.11
Complex waves, as shown earlier in Fig
4.18, differ from pure sine waves. The
Note: These conversion factors apply only to continuous pure sine waves.
amplitude of the peak voltage may vary
significantly from one cycle to the next.
Therefore, other amplitude measures are
required, especially for accurate measure-
the 2 , or E pk 120 V u 1.414 170 V ment of voltage and power with single
sideband (SSB) waveforms. Fig 4.27
Epk = ERMS × 1.414 (38) E pp 2 u 170 V 340 V illustrates a multitone composite wave-
form with an RF ac waveform as the basis.
Unless otherwise specified, unlabeled The RF ac waveform has a frequency
I pk I RMS u 1.414 (39) ac voltage and current values found in many times that of the audio-frequency ac
most electronics literature are normally waveform with which it is usually com-
Since circuit specifications will most RMS values. bined in SSB operations. Therefore, the
commonly list only RMS voltage and cur- resultant waveform appears as an ampli-
rent values, these relationships are impor- Average Values of Voltage and
tude envelope superimposed upon the RF
tant in finding the peak voltages or Current
waveform. The peak envelope voltage
currents that will stress components. Certain kinds of circuits respond to the (PEV), then, is the maximum or peak value
Example: What is the peak voltage on a average value of an ac waveform. Among of voltage achieved.
capacitor if the RMS voltage of a sinusoi- these circuits are electrodynamic meter Peak envelope voltage permits the cal-
dal waveform signal across it is 300 V ac? movements and power supplies that convert culation of peak envelope power (PEP).
ac to dc and use heavily inductive (“choke”) The Federal Communications Commis-
input filters, both of which use the pulsa- sion (FCC) uses the concept of peak enve-
E pk 300 V u 1.414 424 V ting dc output of a full-wave rectifier. The lope power to set the maximum power
average value of each ac half cycle is the standards for amateur transmitters. PEP is
The capacitor must be able to withstand mean of all the instantaneous values in that the average power supplied to the antenna
this higher voltage, plus a safety margin. half cycle. Related to the peak values of transmission line by a transmitter during
The capacitor must also be rated for ac voltage and current, average values are 2 / π one RF cycle at the crest of the modulation
use. A capacitor rated for 1 kV dc may (or 0.6366) times the peak value. envelope, taken under normal operating
explode if used in this application. In conditions. Since calculation of PEP
power supplies that convert ac to dc and E ave 0.6366 E pk (40)
requires the average power of the cycle,
use capacitive input filters, the output multiply the PEV by 0.707 to obtain the
I ave 0.6366 I pk (41)
voltage will approach the peak value of
RMS value. Then calculate power by
the ac voltage rather than the RMS value.
using the square of the voltage divided by
Example: What is the peak voltage and For convenience, Table 4.4 summarizes
the load resistance.
the peak-to-peak voltage at the usual the relationships between all of the com-
household ac outlet, if the RMS voltage is mon ac values. All of these relationships (PEV u 0.707)2
PEP (42)
120 V? apply only to pure sine waves. R
4.18 Chapter 4
plates. The current flows only during the
time of charge and discharge, however, Table 4.5
and this time is usually very short. There Relative Dielectric Constants of Common Capacitor Dielectric Materials
can be no continuous flow of direct cur-
(O)rganic or
rent through a capacitor. Material Dielectric Constant (k) (I)norganic
Fig 4.30 demonstrates the voltage and
Vacuum 1 (by definition) I
current in the circuit, first, at the moment Air 1.0006 I
the switch is closed to charge the capaci- Ruby mica 6.5 - 8.7 I
tor and, second, at the moment the short- Glass (flint) 10 I
ing switch is closed to discharge the unit. Barium titanate (class I) 5 - 450 I
Note that the periods of charge and Barium titanate (class II) 200 - 12000 I
Kraft paper ≈ 2.6 O
discharge are very short, but that they are
Mineral Oil ≈ 2.23 O
not zero. This finite charging and Castor Oil ≈ 4.7 O
discharging time can be lengthened and Halowax ≈ 5.2 O
will prove useful later in timing circuits. Chlorinated diphenyl ≈ 5.3 O
Although dc cannot pass through a Polyisobutylene ≈ 2.2 O
capacitor, alternating current can. As fast Polytetrafluoroethylene ≈ 2.1 O
Polyethylene terephthalate ≈3 O
as one plate is charged positively by the Polystyrene ≈ 2.6 O
positive excursion of the alternating cur- Polycarbonate ≈ 3.1 O
rent, the other plate is being charged nega- Aluminum oxide ≈ 8.4 I
tively. Positive charges flowing into one Tantalum pentoxide ≈ 28 I
plate causes a current to flow out of the Niobium oxide ≈ 40 I
other plate during one half of the cycle, Titanium dioxide ≈ 80 I
resulting in a negative charge on that plate. (Adapted from: Charles A. Harper, Handbook of Components for
The reverse occurs during the second half Electronics, p 8-7.)
of the cycle.
The charge or quantity of electricity that
can be held on the capacitor plates is pro-
portional to the applied voltage and to the
capacitance of the capacitor: dielectric. The larger the plate area
and the smaller the spacing between the
Q CE (43) plates, the greater the capacitance. The
capacitance also depends on the kind of
where: insulating material between the plates; it
Q = charge in coulombs, is smallest with air insulation or a vacuum.
C = capacitance in farads, and Substituting other insulating materials for
E = electrical potential in volts. air may greatly increase the capacitance.
The ratio of the capacitance with a
The energy stored in a capacitor is material other than a vacuum or air
also a function of electrical potential and between the plates to the capacitance of
capacitance: the same capacitor with air insulation is Fig 4.31 — A multiple-plate capacitor.
called the dielectric constant, or K, of that Alternate plates are connected to each
E2 C other.
W (44) particular insulating material. The dielec-
2 tric constants of a number of materials
where: commonly used as dielectrics in capaci-
W = energy in joules (watt-seconds), tors are given in Table 4.5. For example, obtain a fairly large capacitance in a small
E = electrical potential in volts (some if a sheet of polystyrene is substituted for space, since several plates of smaller indi-
texts use V instead of E), and air between the plates of a capacitor, the vidual area can be stacked to form the
C = capacitance in farads. capacitance will be 2.6 times greater. equivalent of a single large plate of the
The basic unit of capacitance, the abil- same total area. Also, all plates except the
The numerator of this expression can be
ity to store electrical energy in an elec- two on the ends are exposed to plates of the
derived easily from the definitions for
trostatic field, is the farad. This unit is other group on both sides, and so are twice
charge, capacitance, current, power and
generally too large for practical radio as effective in increasing the capacitance.
energy. The denominator is not so obvi-
work, however. Capacitance is usually The formula for calculating capacitance
ous, however. It arises because the volt-
measured in microfarads (abbreviated from these physical properties is:
age across a capacitor is not constant, but
is a function of time. The average voltage μF), nanofarads (abbreviated nF) or pico-
farads (pF). The microfarad is one mil- 0.2248 K A (n 1)
over the time interval determines the C (45)
lionth of a farad (10–6 F), the nanofarad is d
energy stored. The time dependence of the
capacitor voltage is a very useful prop- one thousandth of a microfarad (10–9 F)
erty; see the section on time constants. and the picofarad is one millionth of a where:
microfarad (10–12 F). C = capacitance in pF,
UNITS OF CAPACITANCE AND In practice, capacitors often have more K = dielectric constant of material
CAPACITOR CONSTRUCTION than two plates, the alternate plates being between plates,
A capacitor consists, fundamentally, of connected to form two sets, as shown in A = area of one side of one plate in
two plates separated by an insulator or Fig 4.31. This practice makes it possible to square inches,
(A)
(C)
4.20 Chapter 4
atoms the way they do in conductors. If It is not safe to connect capacitors
the force is great enough, however, the across an ac power line unless they are
dielectric will break down. Failed dielec- rated for such use. Capacitors with dc rat-
trics usually puncture and offer a low-re- ings may short the line. Several manufac-
sistance current path between the two turers make capacitors specifically rated
plates. for use across the ac power line.
The breakdown voltage a dielectric can For use with other ac signals, the peak
withstand depends on the chemical com- value of ac voltage should not exceed the
position and thickness of the dielectric. dc working voltage, unless otherwise
Breakdown voltage is not directly propor- specified in component ratings. In other
tional to the thickness; doubling the thick- words, the RMS value of ac should be
ness does not quite double the breakdown 0.707 times the dcwv value or lower. With
voltage. Gas dielectrics also break down, many types of capacitors, further derating
as evidenced by a spark or arc between the is required as the operating frequency
plates. Spark voltages are generally given increases. An additional safety margin is
with the units kilovolts per centimeter. For good practice.
air, the spark voltage or Vs may range from Any two surfaces having different elec-
more than 120 kV/cm for gaps as narrow trical potentials, and which are close
as 0.006 cm down to 28 kV/cm for gaps as enough to exhibit a significant electro-
wide as 10 cm. In addition, a large number static field, constitute a capacitor. The
of variables enter into the actual break- arrangement of circuit components and
down voltage in a real situation. Among leads sometimes results in the creation of
the variables are the electrode shape, the unintended capacitors. This is called stray
capacitance: It often results in the passage Fig 4.33 — Capacitors in parallel are
gap distance, the air pressure or density, shown at A, and in series at B.
the voltage, impurities in the air (or any of signals in ways that disrupt the normal
other dielectric material) and the nature of operation of a circuit. Good design mini-
the external circuit (with air, for instance, mizes stray capacitance.
the humidity affects conduction on the Stray capacitance may have a greater formula becomes:
surface of the capacitor plate). affect in a high-impedance circuit because
the capacitive reactance may be a greater C1 u C2
Dielectric breakdown occurs at a lower C total (49)
voltage between pointed or sharp-edged percentage of the circuit impedance. Also, C1 C2
surfaces than between rounded and pol- because stray capacitance often appears
ished surfaces. Consequently, the break- in parallel with the circuit, the stray The same units must be used through-
down voltage between metal plates of any capacitor may bypass more of the desired out; that is, all capacitances must be
given spacing in air can be increased by signal at higher frequencies. Stray capaci- expressed in either μF, nF or pF. Different
buffing the edges of the plates. With most tance can often adversely affect sensitive units cannot be used in the same equation.
gas dielectrics such as air, once the volt- circuits. Capacitors are usually connected in par-
age is removed, the arc ceases and the For further information about the physi- allel to obtain a larger total capacitance
capacitor is ready for use again. If the cal and electrical characteristics of vari- than is available in one unit. The largest
plates are damaged so they are no longer ous types of capacitors in actual use, see voltage that can be applied safely to a par-
smooth and polished, they may have to be the Real-World Component Character- allel-connected group of capacitors is the
polished or the capacitor replaced. In con- istics chapter. voltage that can be applied safely to the
trast, solid dielectrics are permanently one having the lowest voltage rating.
CAPACITORS IN SERIES AND When capacitors are connected in series,
damaged by dielectric breakdown, and
PARALLEL the applied voltage is divided between
often will totally short out and melt or
explode. When a number of capacitors are con- them according to Kirchhoff’s Voltage
A thick dielectric must be used to with- nected in parallel, as in Fig 4.33A, the Law. The situation is much the same as
stand high voltages. Since the capacitance total capacitance of the group is equal to when resistors are in series and there is a
is inversely proportional to dielectric the sum of the individual capacitances:
thickness (plate spacing) for a given plate
area, a high-voltage capacitor must have C total C1 C2 C3 C4 ... C n (47)
more plate area than a low-voltage one of
the same capacitance. High-voltage, high- When two or more capacitors are con-
capacitance capacitors are therefore physi- nected in series, as in Fig 4.33B, the total
cally large. capacitance is less than that of the small-
Dielectric strength is specified in terms est capacitor in the group. The rule for
of a dielectric withstanding voltage finding the capacitance of a number of
(DWV), given in volts per mil (0.001 inch) series-connected capacitors is the same as
at a specified temperature. Taking into that for finding the resistance of a number
account the design temperature range of a of parallel-connected resistors.
capacitor and a safety margin, manufac- 1
turers specify dc working voltage (dcwv) C total
1 1 1 1 (48) Fig 4.34 — An example of capacitors
to express the maximum safe limits of dc ... connected in series. The text shows
C1 C2 C3 Cn
voltage across a capacitor to prevent how to find the voltage drops, E1
dielectric breakdown. For only two capacitors in series, the through E3.
4.22 Chapter 4
exhibits the same time-constant character- 0.001 s timing period, so we substitute that value
R
istics (calculated in the same way as 0.05 u 10 -6 F for t.
above) as a charging capacitor. The volt-
4.5 s
age, as a function of time while the capaci- 0.02 u 10 6 ȍ 20000 ȍ 20 kȍ RC 4.1 s
tor is being discharged, is given by: 1.10
In practice, a builder would likely
either experiment with values or use a
If we select a value of 10 μF, we can
ª 1 º variable resistor. The final value would
solve for R.
V(t) E « e RC » be selected after monitoring the waveform
(52) on an oscilloscope.
«¬ »¼ 4.1 s
Example 3: Many modern integrated cir- R 0.41 u 10 6 ȍ 410 kȍ
10 u 10 6 F
cuit (IC) devices use RC circuits to control
where t = time in seconds after initia- their timing. To match their internal cir-
tion of discharge. cuitry, they may use a specified threshold A 1% tolerance resistor and capacitor
Again, by letting t = RC, the time con- voltage as the trigger level. For example, a will give good precision. You could also
stant of a discharging capacitor represents certain IC uses a trigger level of 0.667 of use a variable resistor and an accurate
a decrease in the voltage across the ca- the supply voltage. What value of capaci- method to measure the time to set the cir-
pacitor of about 63.2%. After 5 time-con- tor and resistor would be required for a cuit to a 4.5 s period.
stant periods, the capacitor is considered 4.5-second timing period? As the examples suggest, RC circuits
fully discharged, since the voltage has First we will solve equation 50 for the have numerous applications in electron-
dropped to less than 1% of the full-charge time constant, RC. The threshold voltage ics. The number of applications is
voltage. is 0.667 times the supply voltage, so we growing steadily, especially with the
Time constant calculations have many use this value for V(t). introduction of integrated circuits con-
uses in radio work. The following trolled by part or all of a capacitor charge
ª t º or discharge cycle.
examples are all derived from practical-
circuit applications. V (t) E «1 e RC »
« » ALTERNATING CURRENT IN
Example 1: A 100-μF capacitor in a ¬ ¼
CAPACITANCE
high-voltage power supply is shunted by a ª t º
Everything said about capacitance and
100-kΩ resistor. What is the minimum 0.667 E E «1 e RC »
time before the capacitor may be consid- « » capacitors in a dc circuit applies to capaci-
¬ ¼ tance in an ac circuit with one major
ered fully discharged? Since full discharge
is approximately 5 RC periods, t exception. Whereas a capacitor in a dc cir-
RC
e 1 0.667 cuit will appear as an open circuit except
3 -6 for the brief charge and discharge periods,
t 5 u RC 5 u 100 u 10 ȍ u 100 u 10 F ª t º the same capacitor in an ac circuit will both
-3
50000 u 10 seconds ln « e RC » ln (0.333) pass and limit current. A capacitor in an ac
«¬ »¼ circuit does not handle electrical energy
t 50.0 s like a resistor, however. Instead of con-
t verting the energy to heat and dissipating
1.10
Note: Although waiting almost a minute RC it, capacitors store electrical energy and
for the capacitor to discharge seems safe return it to the circuit.
in this high-voltage circuit, never rely We want to find a capacitor and resistor In Fig 4.37 a sine-wave ac voltage having
solely on capacitor-discharging resistors combination that will produce a 4.5 s a maximum value of 100 is applied to a ca-
(often called bleeder resistors). Be cer-
tain the power source is removed and the
capacitors are totally discharged before
touching any circuit components.
Example 2: Smooth CW keying without
clicks requires approximately 5 ms (0.005
s) of delay in both the make and break
edges of the waveform, relative to full
charging and discharging of a capacitor in
the circuit. What typical values might a
builder choose for an RC delay circuit in
a keyed voltage line? Since full charge and
discharge require 5 RC periods,
t 0.005 s
RC 0.001 s
5 5
4.24 Chapter 4
Inductance and Inductors
A second way to store electrical energy metric system units, we measure magnetic magnet has magnetic properties identical
is in a magnetic field. This phenomenon is flux in maxwells (1Mx = 10-8 Wb). in principle to those of a permanent mag-
called inductance, and the devices that The field intensity, known as the flux net, including poles and lines of force or
exhibit inductance are called inductors. density, decreases with the square of the flux. The strength of the magnetic field
Inductance depends upon some basic distance from the source. Flux density (B) depends on several factors: the number of
underlying magnetic properties. See is represented in gauss (G), where one turns of the coil, the magnetic properties
Chapter 6 for more information on practi- gauss is equivalent to one line of force per of the materials surrounding the coil (both
cal inductor applications and problems. square centimeter of area across the field inside and out), the length of the magnetic
(G = Mx / cm2). The gauss is a cgs unit. In path and the amplitude of the current.
MAGNETISM SI units, flux density is represented by the The magnetizing or magnetomotive
tesla (T), which is one weber per square force that produces a flux or total mag-
Magnetic Fields, Flux and Flux meter (T = Wb/m2). netic field is measured in gilberts (Gb).
Density Magnetic fields exist around two types The force in gilberts equals 0.4π (approxi-
Magnetic fields are closed fields that sur- of materials. First, certain ferromagnetic mately 1.257) times the number of turns
round a magnet, as illustrated in Fig 4.39. materials contain molecules aligned so in the coil times the current in amperes.
The field consists of lines of magnetic as to produce a magnetic field. Lodestone, (The SI unit of magnetomotive force is the
force or flux. It exhibits polarity, which is Alnico and other materials with high ampere turn, abbreviated A, just like the
conventionally indicated as north-seeking retentivity form permanent magnets ampere.) The magnetic field strength, H,
and south-seeking poles, or north and because they retain their magnetic proper- measured in oersteds (Oe) produced by
south poles for short. Magnetic flux is ties for long periods. Other materials, such any particular magnetomotive force (mea-
measured in the SI unit of the as soft iron, yield temporary magnets that sured in gilberts) is given by:
weber, which is a volt second (Wb = Vs). lose their magnetic properties rapidly.
0.4 ʌ N I
In the centimeter gram second (cgs) The second type of magnetic material is H (55)
an electrical conductor with a current "
through it. As shown in Fig 4.40, moving where:
electrons are surrounded by a closed mag- H = magnetic field strength in oersteds,
netic field lying in planes perpendicular to N = number of turns,
their motion. The needle of a compass I = dc current in amperes,
placed near a wire carrying direct current π = 3.1416, and
will be deflected by the magnetic field " = mean magnetic path length in cen-
around the wire. This phenomenon is one timeters.
aspect of a two-way relationship: a mov- The gilbert and oersted are cgs units.
ing magnetic field whose lines cut across These are given here because most ama-
a wire will induce an electrical current in teur calculations will use these units. You
the wire, and an electrical current will pro- may also see the preferred SI units in some
duce a magnetic field. literature. The SI unit of magnetic field
If the wire is coiled into a solenoid, the strength is the ampere (turn) per meter.
magnetic field greatly intensifies as the A force is required to produce a given
Fig 4.39 — The magnetic field and
poles of a permanent magnet. The individual flux lines add together. Fig 4.41 magnetic field strength. This implies that
magnetic field direction is from the illustrates the principle by showing a coil there is a resistance, called reluctance, to
north to the south pole. section. Note that the resulting electro- be overcome.
Note: all materials in sheet form except * (insulated powder) and ** (sintered powder).
(Reference: L. Ridenour, ed., Modern Physics for the Engineer, p 119.)
4.26 Chapter 4
B formed by the source of the voltage. physical configuration of the inductor.
ȝ (56) Power is required for doing work, and Coiling a conductor increases its induc-
H since power is equal to current multiplied tance. In effect, the growing (or shrink-
where: by voltage, there must be a voltage drop in ing) magnetic field of each turn produces
B is the flux density in gauss, and the circuit while energy is being stored in magnetic lines of force that — in their
H is the magnetic field strength in oer- the field. This voltage drop, exclusive of expansion (or contraction) — cut across
steds. any voltage drop caused by resistance in the other turns of the coil, inducing a volt-
Unlike electrical conductivity, which is the circuit, is the result of an opposing age in every other turn. The mutuality of
independent of other electrical param- voltage induced in the circuit while the the effect multiplies the ability of the
eters, the permeability of a magnetic field is building up to its final value. Once coiled conductor to store electrical energy.
material varies with the flux density. At the field becomes constant, the induced A coil of many turns will have more
low flux densities (or with an air core), voltage or back-voltage disappears, be- inductance than one of few turns, if both
increasing the current through the coil will cause no further energy is being stored. coils are otherwise physically similar.
cause a proportionate increase in flux. But The induced voltage opposes the voltage Furthermore, if an inductor is placed
at very high flux densities, increasing the of the source and tends to prevent the cur- around a magnetic core, its inductance will
current beyond a certain point may cause rent from rising rapidly when the circuit is increase in proportion to the permeability
no appreciable change in the flux. At this closed. Fig 4.46A illustrates the situation of that core, if the circuit current is below
point, the core is said to be saturated. Satu- of energizing an inductor or magnetic cir- the point at which the core saturates.
ration causes a rapid decrease in perme- cuit, showing the relative amplitudes of The polarity of an induced voltage is
ability, because it decreases the ratio of induced voltage and the delayed rise in always such as to oppose any change in
flux lines to those obtainable with the current to its full value. the circuit current. This means that when
same current using an air core. Fig 4.43 The amplitude of the induced voltage is the current in the circuit is increasing,
displays a typical permeability curve, proportional to the rate at which the cur- work is being done against the induced
showing the region of saturation. The satu- rent changes (and consequently, the rate voltage by storing energy in the magnetic
ration point varies with the makeup of dif- at which the magnetic field changes) and field. Likewise, if the current in the circuit
ferent magnetic materials. Air and other to a constant associated with the circuit tends to decrease, the stored energy of the
nonmagnetic materials do not saturate and itself: the inductance (or self-inductance) field returns to the circuit, and adds to the
have a permeability of one. Reluctance, of the circuit. Inductance depends on the energy being supplied by the voltage
which is the reciprocal of permeability and
corresponds roughly to resistance in an
electrical circuit, is also one for air and
other nonmagnetic cores.
The retentivity of magnetic core materi-
als creates another potential set of losses
caused by hysteresis. Fig 4.44 illustrates the
change of flux density (B) with a changing
magnetizing force (H). From starting point
A, with no residual flux, the flux reaches
point B at the maximum magnetizing force.
As the force decreases, so too does the flux,
but it does not reach zero simultaneously
with the force at point D. As the force con-
tinues in the opposite direction, it brings
the flux density to point C. As the force
decreases to zero, the flux once more lags
behind. In effect, a reverse force is neces-
sary to overcome the residual magnetism
retained by the core material, a coercive
force. The result is a power loss to the mag-
netic circuit, which appears as heat in the
core material. Air cores are immune to hys-
teresis effects and losses.
4.28 Chapter 4
(C)
Fig 4.48 — Part A shows small-value air-
wound inductors. Part B shows some
inductors with values in the range of a
few millihenrys and C shows a large
inductor such as might be used in audio
(A) (B) circuits or as power-supply chokes. The
1
/4-inch-ruled graph paper background
provides a size comparison.
length is often critical. Circuits may fail ing beyond them to other parts of circuits. appear in Fig 4.48C. Lower values of these
to operate properly because leads are a Low-frequency radio work may also use iron-core coils, in the range of a few hen-
little too short or too long. inductors in this range of values, some- rys, are useful as audio-frequency chokes.
It is possible to make these solenoid times wound with litz wire. Litz wire is a Larger values up to about 20 H may be
coils variable by inserting a slug in the special version of stranded wire, with each found in power supplies, as choke filters,
center of the coil. (Slug-tuned coils nor- strand insulated from the others. For to suppress 120-Hz ripple. Although some
mally have a ceramic, plastic or phenolic audio filters, toroidal coils with values of these inductors are open frame, most
insulating form between the conductive below 100 mH are useful. Resembling have iron covers to confine the powerful
slug and the coil winding.) If the slug powdered-iron-core RF toroids, these magnetic fields they produce.
material is magnetic, such as powdered coils are wound on ferrite or molybdenum-
iron, the inductance increases as the slug permalloy cores having much higher INDUCTANCES IN SERIES AND
is centered along the length of the coil. If permeabilities. PARALLEL
the slug is brass or some other conductive Audio and power-supply inductors When two or more inductors are con-
but nonmagnetic material, centering the
slug will reduce the coil’s inductance. This
effect stems from the fact that brass has
low electrical resistance and acts as an
effective short-circuited one-turn second-
ary for the coil. (See more on transformer
effects later in this chapter.)
An alternative to air-core inductors for
RF work are toroidal coils wound on cores
composed of powdered iron mixed with a
binder to hold the material together. The
availability of many types and sizes of
powdered-iron cores has made these
inductors popular for low-power fixed-
value service. The toroidal shape concen-
trates the inductor’s field tightly about the
coil, eliminating the need in many cases
for other forms of shielding to limit the
interaction of the inductor’s magnetic
field with the fields of other inductors.
Fig 4.48B shows samples of inductors
in the millihenry range. Among these Fig 4.49 — Part A shows inductances in
inductors are multisection RF chokes series, and Part B shows inductances Fig 4.50 — Time constant of an RL
designed to keep RF currents from pass- in parallel. circuit being energized.
4.30 Chapter 4
where t = time in seconds after removal of
the source voltage. standing that the primary cause for current inductors and capacitors.
After one time constant the current will lag in an inductor is the reverse voltage
lose 63.2% of its steady-state value. (It generated in the inductance. The ampli- INDUCTIVE REACTANCE
will decay to 36.8% of the steady-state tude of the reverse voltage is proportional The amplitude of alternating current in
value.) The graph in Fig 4.51 shows the to the rate at which the current changes. In an inductor is inversely proportional to the
current-decay waveform to be identical to time segment OA, when the applied volt- applied frequency. Since the reverse volt-
the voltage-discharge waveform of a age is at its positive maximum, the reverse age is directly proportional to inductance
capacitor. Be careful about applying the or induced voltage is also maximum, for a given rate of current change, the
terms charge and discharge to an induc- allowing the least current to flow. The rate current is inversely proportional to induc-
tive circuit, however. These terms refer to at which the current is changing is the tance for a given applied voltage and
energy storage in an electric field. An highest, a 38% change in the time period frequency.
inductor stores energy in a magnetic field. OA. In the segment AB, the current The combined effect of inductance and
changes by only 33%, yielding a reduced frequency is called inductive reactance,
ALTERNATING CURRENT IN level of induced voltage, which is in step which — like capacitive reactance — is
INDUCTORS with the decrease in the applied voltage. expressed in ohms. The formula for induc-
When an alternating voltage is applied The process continues in time segments tive reactance is:
to an ideal inductance (one with no resis- BC and CD, the latter producing only XL 2 ʌ f L (63)
tance — all practical inductors have some an 8% rise in current as the applied and
resistance), the current is 90° out of phase where:
induced voltage approach zero.
with the applied voltage. In this case the XL = inductive reactance,
In segment DE, the applied voltage
current lags 90° behind the voltage, the changes direction. The induced voltage f = frequency in hertz,
opposite of the capacitor current-voltage also changes direction, which returns cur- L = inductance in henrys, and
relationship, as shown in Fig 4.52. (Here rent to the circuit from storage in the mag- π = 3.1416.
again, we can also say the voltage across netic field. The direction of this current is ( If Ȧ 2 ʌ f, then X L Ȧ L. )
an inductor leads the current by 90°.) now opposite to the applied voltage, Example: What is the reactance of a coil
If you have difficulty remembering the which sustains the current in the positive having an inductance of 8.00 H at a fre-
phase relationships between voltage and direction. As the applied voltage contin- quency of 120 Hz?
current with inductors and capacitors, you ues to increase negatively, the current —
although positive — decreases in value, XL 2ʌf L
may find it helpful to think of the phrase,
“ELI the ICE man.” This will remind you reaching zero as the applied voltage 6.2832 u 120 Hz u 8.00 H
that voltage across an inductor leads the reaches its negative maximum. The nega-
6030 ȍ
current through it, because the E comes tive half-cycle continues just as did the
before the I, with an L between them, as positive half-cycle. In RF circuits the inductance values are
you read from left to right. (The letter L Compare Fig 4.52 with Fig 4.37. usually small and the frequencies are
represents inductance.) It will also help Whereas in a pure capacitive circuit, the large. When the inductance is expressed
you remember the capacitor conditions current leads the voltage by 90º, in a pure in millihenrys and the frequency in kilo-
because I comes before E with a C be- inductive circuit, the current lags the volt- hertz, the conversion factors for the two
tween them. age by 90º. These phenomena are espe- units cancel, and the formula for reactance
Interpreting Fig 4.52 begins with under- cially important in circuits that combine may be used without first converting
to fundamental units. Similarly, no con-
version is necessary if the inductance is
expressed in microhenrys and the fre-
quency in megahertz.
Example: What is the reactance of a
15.0-microhenry coil at a frequency of
14.0 MHz?
XL 2ʌf L
6.2832 u 14.0 MHz u 15.0 ȝH
1320 ȍ
The resistance of the wire used to wind
the coil has no effect on the reactance, but
simply acts as a separate resistor con-
nected in series with the coil.
Example: What is the reactance of the
same coil at a frequency of 7.0 MHz?
XL 2ʌf L
6.2832 u 7.0 MHz u 15.0 ȝH
660 ȍ
Comparing the two examples suggests
Fig 4.52 — Phase relationships between voltage and current when an alternating correctly that inductive reactance varies
current is applied to an inductance. directly with frequency. The rate of
AC Component Summary
4.32 Chapter 4
simplified formula: than 0.4 d. (Note: Inductance varies as the one inch and is long enough to accommo-
square of the turns. If the number of turns date a coil of 11/4 inches. Then d = 1.00
d2 n2 is doubled, the inductance is quadrupled.
L ȝH (66) inch, " = 1.25 inches and L = 10.0. Sub-
18 d 40 " This relationship is inherent in the equa- stituting:
where: tion, but is often overlooked. For example,
L = inductance in microhenrys, if you want to double the inductance, put 10.0 [(18 u 1.00) (40 u 1.25)]
on additional turns equal to 1.4 times the n
d = coil diameter in inches (from wire 1
center to wire center), original number of turns, or 40% more
turns.) 680 26.1 turns
" = coil length in inches, and
n = number of turns. Example: What is the inductance of a A 26-turn coil would be close enough in
coil if the coil has 48 turns wound at 32 practical work. Since the coil will be 1.25
The notation is explained in Fig 4.53. turns per inch and a diameter of 3/4 inch? inches long, the number of turns per inch
This formula is a close approximation for In this case, d = 0.75, " = 48/32 = 1.5 and n will be 26.1 / 1.25 = 20.9. Consulting the
coils having a length equal to or greater = 48. wire table in the Component Data and
References chapter, we find that #17
0.752 u 48 2 enameled wire (or anything smaller) can
L
(18 u 0.75) (40 u 1.5) be used. The proper inductance is obtained
by winding the required number of turns
1300 on the form and then adjusting the spacing
18 PH
74 between the turns to make a uniformly
spaced coil 1.25 inches long.
To calculate the number of turns of a
Most inductance formulas lose accu-
single-layer coil for a required value of
racy when applied to small coils (such as
inductance, the formula becomes: are used in VHF work and in low-pass fil-
L (18 d 40 ") ters built for reducing harmonic interfer-
n (67) ence to televisions) because the conductor
d thickness is no longer negligible in com-
Fig 4.53 — Coil dimensions used in the Example: Suppose an inductance of parison with the size of the coil. Fig 4.54
inductance formula for air-core 10.0 μH is required. The form on which shows the measured inductance of VHF
inductors. the coil is to be wound has a diameter of coils and may be used as a basis for circuit
design. Two curves are given; curve A is
for coils wound to an inside diameter of
1
/ 2 inch; curve B is for coils of 3/ 4-inch
inside diameter. In both curves, the wire
size is #12, and the winding pitch is eight
turns to the inch (1/8-inch center-to-center
turn spacing). The inductance values
given include leads 1/2-inch long.
Machine-wound coils with the preset
diameters and turns per inch are available
in many radio stores, under the trade names
of B&W Miniductor, Airdux and Polycoil.
The Component Data and References
chapter provides information on using such
coil stock to simplify the process of design-
ing high-quality inductors for most HF
applications. Forming a wire into a sole-
noid increases its inductance, and also
introduces distributed capacitance. Since
each turn is at a slightly different ac poten-
tial, each pair of turns effectively forms a
parasitic capacitor. See the Real-World
Component Characteristics chapter for
information on the effects of these compli-
cations to the “ideal” inductors under dis-
cussion in this chapter. Moreover, the Q of
air-core inductors is, in part, a function of
the coil shape, specifically its ratio of
length to diameter. Q tends to be highest
when these dimensions are nearly equal.
With wire properly sized to the current car-
ried by the coil, and with high-caliber con-
struction, air-core inductors can achieve Qs
Fig 4.54 — Measured inductance of coils wound with #12 bare wire, eight turns to above 200. Air-core inductors with Qs as
the inch. The values include half-inch leads. high as 400 are possible.
b b2 4 h 2
3.9370 3.9370 2 4 1.5748 2
3.9370 15.500 4 2.4800
° ª 2h § b 2 2 · º ½°
L 0.0117 b ®log10 « ¨ b a
¸ » ¾ 0.00508 §¨ 2 2 2 2 b ·
b 4h b a 2h a ¸
°̄ «¬ a ¨© b 2
b 4h
2 ¸»
¹ ¼ °¿ © 4 ¹
where
L=inductance in μH
a=wire radius in inches
b=wire length parallel to ground plane in inches
h= wire height above ground plane in inches
Fig 4.56 — Equation for determining the inductance of a wire parallel to a ground plane, with one end grounded. If the
dimensions are in millimeters, the numerical coefficients become 0.0004605 for the first term and 0.0002 for the second term.
4.34 Chapter 4
losses, which are also significant in iron-
core inductors.
Eddy-current and hysteresis losses in
iron increase rapidly as the frequency of
the alternating current increases. For this
reason, ordinary iron cores can be used
only at power-line and audio frequencies
— up to approximately 15000 Hz. Even
then, a very good grade of iron or steel is
necessary for the core to perform well at
the higher audio frequencies. Laminated
iron cores become completely useless at
radio frequencies.
SLUG-TUNED INDUCTORS
For RF work, the losses in iron cores
can be reduced to a more useful level by
grinding the iron into a powder and then
§ 2b w h·
L 0.00508 b ¨ ln 0.5 0.2235 ¸ mixing it with a “binder” of insulating
© w h b ¹
Fig 4.58 — Typical construction of an material in such a way that the individual
iron-core inductor. The small air gap iron particles are insulated from each
prevents magnetic saturation of the other. Using this approach, cores can be
where
iron and thus maintains the inductance made that function satisfactorily even into
L=inductance in microhenrys
at high currents.
b=length in inches the VHF range.
w=width in inches Because a large part of the magnetic
h=thickness in inches path is through a nonmagnetic material
(the “binder”), the permeability of the iron
Fig 4.57 — Equation for determining the current flowing in the coil, in contrast is low compared with the values obtained
the inductance of a flat strip inductor. to an air-core coil, where the inductance is at power-line frequencies. The core is usu-
independent of current because air does ally shaped in the form of a slug or cylin-
not saturate. der for fit inside the insulating form on
Substituting these values into the for- Iron-core coils such as the one sketched which the coil is wound. Despite the fact
mula yields: in Fig 4.58 are used chiefly in power-sup- that the major portion of the magnetic path
ply equipment. They usually have direct for the flux is in air, the slug is quite effec-
° ª § 7.88 ·º ½° current flowing through the winding, and tive in increasing the coil inductance. By
L 0.0117 u 3.9370 ®log10 « 40.0 u ¨ ¸» ¾ any variation in inductance with current is pushing (or screwing) the slug in and out
°̄ ¬ © 8.9788 ¹¼ °¿
usually undesirable. Inductance variations of the coil, the inductance can be varied
+ 0.00508 × (5.0418 – 3.94 + 0.98425 – may be overcome by keeping the flux den- over a considerable range.
3.1496 + 0.0787) sity below the saturation point of the iron.
L 0.0662 ȝH Opening the core so there is a small air POWDERED-IRON TOROIDAL
gap, indicated by the dashed lines in Fig INDUCTORS
Another conductor configuration that is 4.58, will achieve this goal. The reluctance For fixed-value inductors intended for
frequently used is a flat strip over a ground or magnetic resistance introduced by such use at HF and VHF, the powdered-iron to-
plane. This arrangement has lower skin- a gap is very large compared with that of roidal core has become almost the stan-
effect loss at high frequencies than round the iron, even though the gap is only a dard core and material in low power
wire because it has a higher surface-area small fraction of an inch. Therefore, the circuits. Fig 4.59 shows the general out-
to volume ratio. The inductance of such a gap — rather than the iron — controls the lines of a toroidal coil on a magnetic core.
strip can be found from the formula in Fig flux density. Air gaps in iron cores reduce Manufacturers offer a wide variety of core
4.57. For a large collection of formulas the inductance, but they hold the value materials, or mixes, to provide units that
useful in constructing air-core inductors practically constant regardless of the cur- will perform over a desired frequency
of many configurations, see the “Circuit rent magnitude. range with a reasonable permeability. Ini-
Elements” section in Terman’s Radio When alternating current flows through tial permeabilities for powdered-iron
Engineers’ Handbook or the “Transmis- a coil wound on an iron core, a voltage is cores fall in the range of 3 to 35 for various
sion Media” chapter of The ARRL UHF/ induced. Since iron is a conductor, a cur- mixes. In addition, core sizes are avail-
Microwave Experimenter’s Manual. rent also flows in the core. Such currents able in the range of 0.125-inch outside di-
are called eddy currents. Eddy currents ameter (OD) up to 1.06-inch OD, with
IRON-CORE INDUCTORS represent lost power because they flow larger sizes to 5-inch OD available in cer-
If the permeability of an iron core in an through the resistance of the iron and gen- tain mixes. The range of sizes permits the
inductor is 800, then the inductance of any erate heat. Losses caused by eddy currents builder to construct single-layer inductors
given air-wound coil is increased 800 can be reduced by laminating the core for almost any value using wire sized to
times by inserting the iron core. The (cutting the core into thin strips). These meet the circuit current demands. While
inductance will be proportional to the strips or laminations are then insulated powdered-iron toroids are often painted
magnetic flux through the coil, other from each other by painting them with various colors, you must know the manu-
things being equal. The inductance of an some insulating material such as varnish facturer to identify the mix. There seems
iron-core inductor is highly dependent on or shellac. These losses add to hysteresis to be no set standard between manufac-
4.36 Chapter 4
where: 1.88 u 10 6 1000 0.008 1000 u 0.089 89 turns
L = the inductance in mH, 1.88 mH
1 u 10 6
AL = the inductance index in mH per
To calculate the number of turns needed For inductors carrying both dc and
1000 turns, and
for a particular inductance, use the formula: ac currents, the upper saturation limit
N = the number of turns.
Example: What is the inductance of a for most ferrites is a flux density of
L 2000 gauss, with power calculations iden-
60-turn coil on a core with an AL of 523? N 1000 (73)
AL tical to those used for powdered-
(See the Component Data and Refer-
ences chapter for more detailed data on iron cores. For detailed information on
Example: How many turns are needed
the range of available cores.) for a 1.2-mH coil if the AL for the selected available cores and their characteristics,
core is 150? see Iron-Powder and Ferrite Coil Forms,
AL u N2 523 u 60 2 a combination catalog and information
L book from Amidon Associates, Inc.
1000000 1000000 L 1.2
N 1000 1000
AL 150
1
X C1 X total X C1 X C2 568 ȍ 284 ȍ 852 ȍ (Within the uncertainty of the measured
2ʌf C
values and the rounding of values in the
1 calculations, this is the same result as we
Alternatively, for series capacitors, the obtained with the first method.)
2 u 3.1416 u 28.0 u 10 6 Hz u 10.0 u 10 12 F
total capacitance is 6.67 × 10–12 F or 6.67 This example serves to remind us that
10 6 ȍ pF. Then: series capacitance is not calculated in the
568 ȍ manner used by other series resistance and
1760 1
X total inductance, but series capacitive reac-
1 2ʌf C tance does follow the simple addition for-
X C2
2ʌf C mula.
1 For reactances of the same type in par-
1 allel, the general formula is:
2 u 3.1416 u 28.0 u 10 6 Hz u 6.67 u 10 12 F
2 u 3.1416 u 28.0 u 10 6 Hz u 20.0 u 10 12 F
1
10 6 ȍ 10 6 ȍ X total
284 ȍ 855 ȍ 1 1 1 1 (78)
1170 ...
3520 X1 X2 X3 Xn
4.38 Chapter 4
Example: Place the series inductors X total XL XC
above (4.0 μH each) in parallel in a 80.0 ȍ 20.0 ȍ 60.0 ȍ
3.8-MHz circuit. What is the resultant
reactance? Since the result is a positive value, reac-
X L1 u X L2 tance is inductive. Had the result been a
X total negative number, the reactance would
X L1 X L2 have been capacitive.
96 ȍ u 96 ȍ
When reactance types are mixed in a
48 ȍ series circuit, the resulting reactance is
96 ȍ 96 ȍ always smaller than the larger of the two
Of course, equal reactances (or resis- reactances. Likewise, the resulting volt-
tances) in parallel yield a reactance that is age across the series combination of reac-
the value of one of them divided by the tances is always smaller than the larger of
number (n) of equal reactances, or: the two voltages across individual reac-
tances.
X 96 ȍ Every series circuit of mixed reactance
X total 48 ȍ types with more than two circuit elements
n 2 can be reduced to the type of circuit cov-
ered here. If the circuit has more than one
All of these calculations apply only capacitor or more than one inductor in the
to reactances of the same type; that is, overall series string, first use the formulas
all capacitive or all inductive. Mixing given earlier to determine the total series
types of reactances requires a different inductance alone and the total series
approach. capacitance alone (or their respective
reactances). Then combine the resulting
UNLIKE REACTANCES IN SERIES
single capacitive reactance and single in-
Fig 4.61 — The conventional method of When combining unlike reactances —
plotting reactances on the vertical axis ductive reactance as shown in this section.
of a graph, using the upward or “plus”
that is, combinations of inductive and
direction for inductive reactance and capacitive reactance — in series, it is nec- UNLIKE REACTANCES IN
the downward or “minus” direction for essary to take into account that the volt- PARALLEL
capacitive reactance. The horizontal age-to-current phase relationships differ The situation of parallel reactances of
axis will be used for resistance in later
for the different types of reactance. Fig mixed type appears in Fig 4.63. Since the
examples.
4.62 shows a series circuit with both types elements are in parallel, the voltage is
of reactance. Since the reactances are in common to both reactive components. The
series, the current must be the same in current through the capacitor, IC, leads the
both. The voltage across each circuit ele- voltage by 90°, and the current through
or, for exactly two reactances in parallel
ment differs in phase, however. The volt- the inductor, IL, lags the voltage by 90°.
age EL leads the current by 90°, and the The two currents are 180° out of phase and
X1 u X2 voltage EC lags the current by 90°. There- thus cancel each other in whole or in part.
X total (79)
X1 X2 fore, EL and EC have opposite polarities The total current is the difference between
and cancel each other in whole or in part. the individual currents, as indicated by the
Example: Place the capacitors in the last The dotted line in Fig 4.62 approximates dotted line in Fig 4.63.
example (10.0 pF and 20.0 pF) in parallel the resulting voltage E, which is the dif- Since reactance is the ratio of voltage to
in the 28.0 MHz circuit. What is the result- ference between EL and EC. current, the total reactance in the circuit
ant reactance? Since, for a constant current, the is:
X1 u X2 reactance is directly proportional to the
E
X total voltage, the net reactance must be the dif- X total (81)
X1 X2 ference between the inductive and the IL IC
568 ȍ u 284 ȍ capacitive reactances, or:
189 ȍ In the drawing, IC is larger than I L, and
568 ȍ 284 ȍ the resulting differential current retains
X total XL XC (80) the phase of I C. Therefore, the overall
Alternatively, two capacitors in parallel
add their capacitances. reactance, Xtotal, is capacitive in this case.
For this and subsequent calculations in The total reactance of the circuit will be
C total C1 C 2 10.0 pF 20.0 pF 30 pF which there is a mixture of inductive and smaller than the larger of the individual
capacitive reactance, use the absolute reactances, because the total current
1 value of each reactance. The convention
XC is smaller than the larger of the two
2ʌf C of recording inductive reactances as posi- individual currents.
tive and capacitive reactances as negative In parallel circuits of this type, reac-
1
is built into the mathematical operators in tance and current are inversely propor-
2 u 3.1416 u 28.0 u 10 6 Hz u 30 u 10 12 F the formulas. tional to each other for a constant voltage.
Example: Using Fig 4.62 as a visual aid, Therefore, to calculate the total reactance
10 6 ȍ let XC = 20.0 Ω and XL = 80.0 Ω. What is directly from the individual reactances,
189 ȍ
5280 the resulting reactance? use the formula:
40.0 ȍ u 10.0 ȍ
40.0 ȍ 10.0 ȍ
400 ȍ
13.3 ȍ
30.0 ȍ
The reactance is capacitive, as indicated
by the negative solution. Moreover, the
resultant reactance is always smaller than
the larger of the two individual reactances.
As with the case of series reactances, if
each leg of a parallel circuit contains more
than one reactance, first simplify each leg
to a single reactance. If the reactances are
of the same type in each leg, the series
reactance formulas for reactances of the
same type will apply. If the reactances are
of different types, then use the formulas
shown above for mixed series reactances
to simplify the leg to a single value and
Fig 4.62 — A series circuit containing both inductive and capacitive components, type of reactance.
together with representative voltage and current relationships.
APPROACHING RESONANCE
When two unlike reactances have the
same numerical value, any series or paral-
lel circuit in which they occur is said to be
resonant. For any given inductance or
capacitance, it is theoretically possible to
find a value of the opposite reactance type
to produce a resonant circuit for any
desired frequency.
When a series circuit like the one shown
in Fig 4.62 is resonant, the voltages EC and
EL are equal and cancel; their sum is zero.
Since the reactance of the circuit is pro-
portional to the sum of these voltages, the
total reactance also goes to zero. Theoreti-
cally, the current, as shown in Fig 4.64,
can rise without limit. In fact, it is limited
only by power losses in the components
and other resistances that would be in a
real circuit of this type. As the frequency
of operation moves slightly off resonance,
the reactance climbs rapidly and then be-
gins to level off. Similarly, the current
drops rapidly off resonance and then lev-
els.
Fig 4.63 — A parallel circuit containing both inductive and capacitive components, In a parallel-resonant circuit of the type
together with representative voltage and current relationships.
in Fig 4.63, the current IL and IC are equal
and cancel to zero. Since the reactance is
inversely proportional to the current, as
the current approaches zero, the reactance
rises without limit. As with series circuits,
component power losses and other resis-
XL u XC
X total (82) tive numbers. If the solution yields a nega- tances in the circuit limit the current drop
XL XC tive number, the resulting reactance is ca- to some point above zero. Fig 4.65 shows
pacitive, and if the solution is positive, the theoretical current curve near and at
As with the series formula for mixed then the reactance is inductive. resonance for a purely reactive parallel-
reactances, use the absolute values of the Example: Using Fig 4.63 as a visual aid, resonant circuit. Note that in both Fig 4.64
reactances, since the minus signs in the place a capacitive reactance of 10.0 Ω in and Fig 4.65, the departure of current from
formula take into account the convention parallel with an inductive reactance of the resonance value is close to, but not
of treating capacitive reactances as nega- 40.0 Ω. What is the resulting reactance? quite, symmetrical above and below the
4.40 Chapter 4
resonant frequency. surable ac voltage and current, we cannot
Example: What is the reactance of a simply multiply the two together to arrive
series L-C circuit consisting of a 56.04-pF at power. Power is the rate at which
capacitor and an 8.967-μH inductor at energy is consumed by a circuit, and purely
7.00, 7.10 and 7.20 MHz? Using the for- reactive circuits do not consume power.
mulas from earlier in this chapter, we cal- The charge placed on a capacitor during
culate a table of values: part of an ac cycle is returned to the circuit
during the next part of a cycle. Likewise,
Frequency XL (Ω) XC (Ω) Xtotal (Ω) the energy stored in the magnetic field of
(MHz) an inductor returns to the circuit as the
7.000 394.4 405.7 –11.3 field collapses later in the ac cycle. A re-
7.100 400.0 400.0 0 active circuit simply cycles and recycles
7.200 405.7 394.4 11.3 energy into and out of the reactive compo-
nents. If a purely reactive circuit were
The exercise shows the manner in which possible in reality, it would consume no
the reactance rises rapidly as the fre- power at all.
quency moves above and below reso- In reactive circuits, circulation of
nance. Note that in a series-resonant energy accounts for seemingly odd phe-
circuit, the reactance at frequencies below Fig 4.65 — The relative generator nomena. For example, in a series circuit
resonance is capacitive, and above reso- current with a fixed voltage in a parallel with capacitance and inductance, the volt-
nance, it is inductive. Fig 4.66 displays circuit containing inductive and ages across the components may exceed
this fact graphically. In a parallel-resonant capacitive reactances as the frequency
approaches and departs from
the supply voltage. That condition can
circuit, where the reactance increases resonance. (The circulating current exist because, while energy is being stored
without limit at resonance, the opposite through the parallel inductor and by the inductor, the capacitor is returning
condition exists: above resonance, the capacitor is a maximum at resonance.) energy to the circuit from its previously
reactance is capacitive and below reso- charged state, and vice versa. In a parallel
nance it is inductive, as shown in Fig 4.67. circuit with inductive and capacitive
Of course, all graphs and calculations in branches, the current circulating through
this section are theoretical and presume a the components may exceed the current
purely reactive circuit. Real circuits are drawn from the source. Again, the phe-
never purely reactive; they contain some nomenon occurs because the inductor’s
resistance that modifies their performance collapsing field supplies current to the
considerably. Real resonant circuits will capacitor, and the discharging capacitor
be discussed later in this chapter. provides current to the inductor.
To distinguish between the non-dissi-
REACTIVE POWER pated power in a purely reactive circuit and
Although purely reactive circuits, the dissipated power of a resistive circuit,
whether simple or complex, show a mea- the unit of reactive power is called the volt-
ampere reactive, or VAR. The term watt is
not used; sometimes reactive power is
called wattless power. Formulas similar to
those for resistive power are used to calcu-
Fig 4.66 — The transition from late VAR:
capacitive to inductive reactance in a
series-resonant circuit as the frequency VAR IuE (83)
passes resonance.
VAR I2 u X (84)
E2
VAR (85)
X
These formulas have only limited use in
radio work.
Impedance
When a circuit contains both resistance section, reactance is graphed on the verti- CALCULATING Z FROM R AND X IN
and reactance, the combined opposition cal (Y) axis to record the phase difference SERIES CIRCUITS
to current is called impedance. Symbol- between the voltage and the current. Fig Impedance is the complex combination
ized by the letter Z, impedance is a more 4.70 adds resistance to the graph. Since of resistance and reactance. Since there is
general term than either resistance or re- the voltage is in phase with the current, a 90° phase difference between resistance
actance. Frequently, the term is used even resistance is recorded on the horizontal and reactance (whether inductive or ca-
for circuits containing only resistance or axis, using the positive or right side of the pacitive), simply adding the two values
reactance. Qualifications such as “resis- scale. will not yield what actually happens in a
tive impedance” are sometimes added to
indicate that a circuit has only resistance,
however.
The reactance and resistance compris-
ing an impedance may be connected ei-
ther in series or in parallel, as shown in
Fig 4.69. In these circuits, the reactance is
shown as a box to indicate that it may be
either inductive or capacitive. In the
series circuit at A, the current is the same
in both elements, with (generally) differ-
ent voltages appearing across the resis-
tance and reactance. In the parallel circuit
at B, the same voltage is applied to both
elements, but different currents may flow
in the two branches.
In a resistance, the current is in phase
with the applied voltage, while in a reac-
tance it is 90° out of phase with the volt-
age. Thus, the phase relationship between Fig 4.70 — The conventional method of
current and voltage in the circuit as a charting impedances on a graph, using
whole may be anything between zero and the vertical axis for reactance (the
upward or “plus” direction for inductive
90°, depending on the relative amounts of reactance and the downward or “minus”
resistance and reactance. Fig 4.69 — Series and parallel circuits direction for capacitive reactance), and
As shown in Fig 4.61 in the preceding containing resistance and reactance. using the horizontal axis for resistance.
4.42 Chapter 4
circuit. Therefore, expressions like “Z = R where: Using the information just calculated,
± X” can be misleading, because they sug- Z = the impedance in ohms, the impedance is:
gest simple addition. As a result, imped- R = the resistance in ohms, and
ance is often expressed “Z = R ± jX.” X = the reactance in ohms. Z = 112 Ω ∠ 63.4°
In pure mathematics, “i” indicates an In the present example,
imaginary number. Because i represents The expressions R ± jX and Z ∠θ both
current in electronics, we use the letter “j” Z 50 j100 ȍ provide the same information, but in two
for the same mathematical operator, different forms. The procedure just
although there is nothing imaginary about given permits conversion from rectangu-
As the graph shows, the combined lar coordinates into polar coordinates.
what it represents in electronics. With
respect to resistance and reactance, the let- opposition to current (or impedance) is The reverse procedure is also important.
ter j is normally assigned to those figures represented by a line triangulating the two Fig 4.72 shows an impedance composed
on the vertical scale, 90° out of phase with given values. The graph will provide an of a capacitive reactance and a resistance.
the horizontal scale. The actual function estimate of the value. A more exact way to Since capacitive reactance appears as a
of j is to indicate that calculating imped- calculate the resultant impedance involves negative value, the impedance will be at a
ance from resistance and reactance the formula for right triangles, where the negative phase angle, in this case, 12.0 Ω
requires vector addition. In vector addi- square of the hypotenuse equals the sum at a phase angle of – 42.0° or Z = 12.0 Ω
tion, the result of combining two values at of the squares of the two sides. Since ∠ – 42.0°.
a 90° phase difference results in a new impedance is the hypotenuse: Think of the impedance as forming a
quantity for the combination, and also in a triangle with the values of X and R from
new combined phase angle relative to the the rectangular coordinates. The reactance
base line. Z R2 X2 (87) axis forms the side opposite the angle θ.
Consider Fig 4.71, a series circuit con-
sisting of an inductive reactance and a In this example: side opposite X
resistance. As given, the inductive reac- sin ș (91)
hypotenuse Z
tance is 100 Ω and the resistance is 50 Ω. Z 50 ȍ 2 100 ȍ 2
Using rectangular coordinates, the im-
pedance becomes 2500 ȍ2 10000 ȍ2
100 ȍ
ș arctan arctan 2.0 63.4q
50 ȍ
4.44 Chapter 4
ductance, if admittance is the desired out- further series resistance. The series com- where the subscripts P and S represent the
come. In other words, for parallel circuits: bination of XC and XL reduce to a single parallel- and series-equivalent values,
value using the same rules of combination respectively. If the parallel values are
Y G 2 B2 (100) discussed in the section on purely reactive known, the equivalent series circuit can
components. As Fig 4.74B demonstrates, be found from:
where: the resultant reactance is the difference
between the two series reactances. RP XP2
Y = admittance, RS (104)
G = conductance or 1 / R, and For parallel circuits with multiple resis- RP2 XP2
B = susceptance or 1 / X. tances or multiple reactances of the same
and
type, use the rules of parallel combination
Example: An inductor with a reactance of to reduce the resistive and reactive com- RP2 XP
ponents to single elements. Where two or XS
30.0 Ω is in parallel with a resistor of 40.0 Ω. RP2 XP2
(105)
What is the resulting impedance and phase more reactive components of different
angle? The susceptance is 1 / 30.0 Ω = types appear in the same circuit, they can Example: Let the series circuit in Fig
0.0333 S and the conductance is 1 / 40.0 Ω
be combined using formulas shown ear- 4.69 have a series reactance of –50.0 Ω
lier for pure reactances. As Fig 4.75 sug- (indicating a capacitive reactance) and a
= 0.0250 S.
gests, however, they can also be combined resistance of 50.0 Ω. What are the values
Y 0.0333 S2 0.0250 S2 as susceptances. Parallel susceptances of of the equivalent parallel circuit?
different types add, with attention to their
0.00173 S2 0.0417 S
differing signs. The resulting single
RP
R S2 X S2 50.0 ȍ2 50.0 ȍ2
susceptance can then be combined with RS 50.0 ȍ
1 1 the conductance to arrive at the overall
Z 24.0 ȍ circuit admittance. The inverse of the ad-
Y 0.0417 S 2500 ȍ2 2500 ȍ2 5000 ȍ2
mittance is the final circuit impedance. 100 ȍ
50.0 ȍ 50.0 ȍ
The phase angle in terms of conduc- Equivalent Series and Parallel
tance and susceptance is: Circuits
XP
R S2 X S2 50.0 ȍ2 50.0 ȍ2
The two circuits shown in Fig 4.69 are XS 50.0 ȍ
§B·
ș arctan ¨ ¸ (101) equivalent if the same current flows when
©G¹ a given voltage of the same frequency is 2500 ȍ2 2500 ȍ2 5000 ȍ2
In this example, applied, and if the phase angle between 50.0 ȍ 50.0 ȍ
voltage and current is the same in both
§ 0.0333 S · 100 ȍ
ș arctan ¨ ¸ arctan 1.33 53.1q cases. It is possible, in fact, to transform
© 0.0250 S ¹ any given series circuit into an equivalent
Again, since the reactive component is parallel circuit, and vice versa.
inductive, the phase angle is positive. For A series RX circuit can be converted
a capacitively reactive parallel circuit, the into its parallel equivalent by means of the
phase angle would have been negative. formulas:
Compare these results with the direct
R S2 X S2
calculation earlier in the section. RP (102)
Conversion from resistance, reactance RS
and impedance to conductance, susceptance
and admittance is perhaps most useful in R S2 X S2
XP (103)
complex-parallel-circuit calculations. Many XS
advanced facets of active-circuit analysis
will demand familiarity both with the con-
cepts and with the calculation strategies in-
troduced here, however.
4.46 Chapter 4
Resonant Circuits
A circuit containing both an inductor work in terms of MHz, μH and pF, the basic of the circuit is determined solely by the
and a capacitor — and therefore, both relationship rearranges to these handy for- resistance. The actual current through the
induc-tive and capacitive reactance — is mulas: circuit at resonance, and for frequencies
often called a tuned circuit. There is a par- near resonance, is determined by the for-
25330
ticular frequency at which the inductive and L (113) mula:
capacitive reactances are the same, that is, f2 C
XL = XC. For most purposes, this is the reso- E E
25330 I
nant frequency of the circuit. (Special con- C (114) Z
f2 L ª 1 º2 (115)
siderations apply to parallel circuits; they R2 «2 ʌf L
will emerge in the section devoted to such ¬ 2 ʌ f C »¼
circuits.) At the resonant frequency — or at where:
f = frequency in MHz, where all values are in basic units.
resonance, for short:
L = inductance in μH, and At resonance, the reactive factor in the
1 C = capacitance in pF.
XL 2ʌf L XC formula is zero. As the frequency is shifted
2ʌf C above or below the resonant frequency
By solving for f, we can find the reso- Example: What value of capacitance without altering component values, how-
nant frequency of any combination of is needed to create a resonant circuit at ever, the reactive factor becomes signifi-
inductor and capacitor from the formula: 21.1 MHz, if the inductor is 2.00 μH? cant, and the value of the current becomes
smaller than at resonance. At frequencies
1
f (110) 25330 25330 far from resonance, the reactive compo-
2ʌ LC C nents become dominant, and the resistance
2
f L 21.12
u 2.00 no longer significantly affects the current
where: amplitude.
25330 The exact curve created by recording
f = frequency in hertz (Hz), 28.5 pF
L = inductance in henrys (H), 890 the current as the frequency changes
C = capacitance in farads (F), and depends on the ratio of reactance to resis-
π = 3.1416. For most radio work, these formulas tance. When the reactance of either the
will permit calculations of frequency and coil or capacitor is of the same order of
For most high-frequency (HF) radio component values well within the limits magnitude as the resistance, the current
work, smaller units of inductance and of component tolerances. Resonant cir- decreases rather slowly as the frequency
capacitance and larger units of frequency cuits have other properties of importance, is moved in either direction away from
are more convenient. The basic formula in addition to the resonant frequency, resonance. Such a curve is said to be
becomes: however. These include impedance, volt- broad. Conversely, when the reactance is
age drop across components in series- considerably larger than the resistance, the
10 3 resonant circuits, circulating current in current decreases rapidly as the frequency
f (111) moves away from resonance, and the cir-
2ʌ LC parallel-resonant circuits, and bandwidth.
These properties determine such factors cuit is said to be sharp. A sharp circuit will
where: respond a great deal more readily to the
as the selectivity of a tuned circuit and the
f = frequency in megahertz (MHz), resonant frequency than to frequencies
component ratings for circuits handling
L = inductance in microhenrys (μH), quite close to resonance; a broad circuit
considerable power. Although the basic
C = capacitance in picofarads (pF), and will respond almost equally well to a
determination of the tuned-circuit reso-
π = 3.1416.
nant frequency ignored any resistance in
the circuit, that resistance will play a vital
Example: What is the resonant fre-
role in the circuit’s other characteristics.
quency of a circuit containing an inductor
of 5.0 μH and a capacitor of 35 pF? SERIES-RESONANT CIRCUITS
10 3
10 3 Fig 4.77 presents a basic schematic
f diagram of a series-resonant circuit.
2ʌ LC 6.2832 u 5.0 u 35 Although most schematic diagrams of
radio circuits would show only the induc-
10 3 tor and the capacitor, resistance is always
12 MHz
83 present in such circuits. The most notable
resistance is associated with losses in the
To find the matching component (induc- inductor at HF; resistive losses in the
tor or capacitor) when the frequency and capacitor are low enough at those frequen-
one component is known (capacitor or cies to be ignored. The current meter
inductor) for general HF work, use the shown in the circuit is a reminder that in
formula: series circuits, the same current flows
through all elements. Fig 4.77 — A series circuit containing L,
1 C, and R is resonant at the applied
f2 (112) At resonance, the reactance of the
frequency when the reactance of C is
4 ʌ2 L C capacitor cancels the reactance of the equal to the reactance of L. The I in the
inductor. The voltage and current are in circle is the schematic symbol for an
where F, L and C are in basic units. For HF phase with each other, and the impedance ammeter.
f 3.75 MHz
QU 10.0
BW 0.375 MHz
4.48 Chapter 4
Table 4.7
The Selectivity of Resonant Circuits
X C2 1
RS (119)
Rp R p u 2 ʌ f C2
4.50 Chapter 4
frequency, apply the general formula: which the impedance falls is a function of signal path to ground. Assume both cir-
QU. Fig 4.84 presents a family of curves cuits are resonant at the same frequency, f,
ZC ZL
Z (122) showing the impedance drop from reso- and have the same Q. The series tuned
ZS circuit at A has its lowest impedance at f,
nance for circuit Qs ranging from 10 to
where: 100. The curve family for parallel-circuit permitting the maximum possible current
Z = overall circuit impedance impedance is essentially the same as the to flow along the signal path. At all other
ZC = impedance of the capacitive leg curve family for series-circuit current. frequencies, the impedance is greater and
(usually, the reactance of the As with series tuned circuits, the higher the current at those frequencies is less. The
capacitor), the Q of a parallel-tuned circuit, the circuit passes the desired signal and tends
ZL = impedance of the inductive leg sharper the response peak. Likewise, the to impede signals at undesired frequen-
(the vector sum of the coil’s reac- lower the Q, the wider the band of fre- cies. The parallel circuit at B provides the
tance and resistance), and quencies to which the circuit responds. highest impedance at resonance, f, mak-
ZS = series impedance of the capacitor- Using the half-power (–3 dB) points as a ing the signal path the lowest impedance
inductor combination as derived comparative measure of circuit perfor-
from the denominator of equation mance, equations 116 and 117 apply
115. equally to parallel-tuned circuits. That is,
After using vector calculations to obtain BW = f / Q U and Q U =
ZL and Z S , converting all the values to f / BW, where the resonant frequency and
polar form — as described earlier in this the bandwidth are in the same units. As a
chapter — will ease the final calculation. handy reminder, Table 4.8 summarizes the
Of course, each impedance may be derived performance of parallel-resonant circuits
from the resistance and the application of at high and low Qs and above and below
the basic reactance formulas on the values resonant frequency.
of the inductor and capacitor at the fre- It is possible to use either series or par-
quency of interest. allel-resonant circuits do the same work in
Since the current rises off resonance, the many circuits, thus giving the designer con-
parallel-resonant-circuit impedance must siderable flexibility. Fig 4.85 illustrates
fall. It also becomes complex, resulting in this general principle by showing a series-
an ever greater phase difference between resonant circuit in the signal path and a
the voltage and the current. The rate at parallel-resonant circuit shunted from the
4.52 Chapter 4
actances are decreased. A circuit loaded or half the present impedance. Fig 4.88. This is equivalent to connecting
with a relatively low resistance (a few A parallel resistor of 24500 Ω, or the a higher value of load resistance across
thousand ohms) must have low-reactance nearest lower value (to guarantee suf- the whole circuit, and is similar in prin-
elements (large capacitance and small ficient bandwidth), will produce the ciple to impedance transformation with an
inductance) to have reasonably high Q. required reduction in Q and bandwidth iron-core transformer (described in the
Many power-handling circuits, such as the increase. Although this example simpli- next section of this chapter). In high-fre-
output networks of transmitters, are fies the situation encountered in real quency resonant circuits, the impedance
designed by first choosing a loaded Q for design cases by ignoring such factors as ratio does not vary exactly as the square of
the circuit and then determining compo- the shape of the band-pass curve, it illus- the turns ratio, because all the magnetic
nent values. See the RF PowerAmplifiers trates the interaction of the ingredients that flux lines do not cut every turn of the coil.
chapter for more details. determine the performance of parallel- A desired impedance ratio usually must
Parallel load resistors are sometimes resonant circuits. be obtained by experimental adjustment.
added to parallel-resonant circuits to lower When the load resistance has a very low
the circuit Q and increase the circuit band- Impedance Transformation value (say below 100 Ω) it may be con-
width. By using a high-Q circuit and adding An important application of the paral- nected in series in the resonant circuit (R S
a parallel resistor, designers can tailor the lel-resonant circuit is as an impedance in Fig 4.82A, for example), in which case
circuit response to their needs. Since the matching device in the output circuit of an it is transformed to an equivalent parallel
parallel resistor consumes power, such tech- RF power amplifier. There is an optimum impedance as previously described. If the
niques ordinarily apply to receiver and simi- value of load resistance for each type of Q is at least 10, the equivalent parallel
lar low-power circuits, however. tube or transistor and each set of required impedance is:
Example: Specifications call for a par- operating conditions. The resistance of the
allel-resonant circuit with a bandwidth of load to which the active device delivers X2
ZR (125)
400 kHz at 14.0 MHz. The circuit at hand power may be considerably lower than the RL
has a QU of 70.0 and its components have value required for proper device opera-
where:
reactances of 350 Ω each. What is the par- tion, or the load impedance may be con-
siderably higher than the amplifier output ZR = resistive parallel impedance at
allel load resistor that will increase the resonance,
bandwidth to the specified value? The impedance.
To transform the actual load resistance X = reactance (in ohms) of either the
bandwidth of the existing circuit is: coil or the capacitor, and
to the desired value, the load may be
tapped across part of the coil, as shown in RL = load resistance inserted in series.
f 14.0 MHz
BW 0.200 MHz
QU 70.0 If the Q is lower than 10, the reactance
will have to be adjusted somewhat — for
200 kHz the reasons given in the discussion of low-
The desired bandwidth, 400 kHz, re- Q circuits — to obtain a resistive imped-
quires a circuit with a Q of: ance of the desired value.
Networks like the one in Fig 4.88 have
f 14.0 MHz some serious disadvantages for some
Q 35.0 applications. For instance, the common
BW 0.400 MHz connection between the input and the out-
Since the desired Q is half the original put provides no dc isolation. Also, the
value, halving the resonant impedance or common ground is sometimes trouble-
parallel-resistance value of the circuit is some with regard to ground-loop currents.
in order. The present impedance of the Consequently, a network with only
circuit is: mutual magnetic coupling is often prefer-
able. With the advent of ferrites, construct-
Z QU XL 70.0 u 350 ȍ 24500 ȍ ing impedance transformers that are both
Fig 4.88 — A parallel-resonant circuit
broadband and permit operation well up
with a tapped coil to effect an
The desired impedance is: impedance match. Although the into the VHF portion of the spectrum has
impedance presented by the entire become relatively easy. The basic prin-
Z QU XL 35.0 u 350 ȍ circuit is very high, the impedance ciples of broadband impedance trans-
“seen” by the load, RL, is lower. formers appear in the following section.
12250 ȍ 12.25 kȍ
4.54 Chapter 4
transformers. Conventionally, the term ductor would be 90° out of phase with the
transformer is most commonly applied to voltage. In any properly designed trans-
coupled inductors having a magnetic core former, the power consumed by the trans-
material, while coupled air-wound induc- former when the secondary is open (not
tors are not called by that name. They are delivering power) is only the amount nec-
still transformers, however. essary to overcome the losses in the iron
We normally think of transformers as core and in the resistance of the wire with
ac devices, since mutual inductance only which the primary is wound.
occurs when magnetic fields are expand- Fig 4.92 — The conditions for When power is taken from the second-
ing or contracting. A transformer con- transformer action: two coils that ary winding by a load, the secondary cur-
exhibit mutual inductance, an ac power
nected to a dc source will exhibit mutual source, and a load. The magnetic field rent sets up a magnetic field that opposes
inductance only at the instants of closing set up by the energy in the primary the field set up by the primary current. For
and opening the primary circuit, or on the circuit transfers energy to the secon- the induced voltage in the primary to equal
rising and falling edges of dc pulses, dary for use by the load, resulting in a the applied voltage, the original field must
because only then does the primary wind- secondary voltage and current. be maintained. The primary must draw
ing have a changing field. The principle enough additional current to set up a field
uses of transformers are three: to physi- exactly equal and opposite to the field set
cally isolate the primary circuit from the ber of turns in each coil. In the primary, up by the secondary current.
secondary circuit, to transform voltages the induced voltage practically equals, In practical transformer calculations it
and currents from one level to another, and opposes, the applied voltage, as de- may be assumed that the entire primary
and to transform circuit impedances from scribed earlier. Hence: current is caused by the secondary load.
one level to another. These functions are This is justifiable because the magnetiz-
not mutually exclusive and have many §N · ing current should be very small in com-
ES E P ¨¨ S ¸¸ (128)
variations. parison with the primary load current at
© NP ¹
rated power output.
IRON-CORE TRANSFORMERS where: If the magnetic fields set up by the pri-
The primary and secondary coils of a ES = secondary voltage, mary and secondary currents are to be
transformer may be wound on a core of EP = primary applied voltage, equal, the primary current multiplied by
magnetic material. The permeability of NS = number of turns on secondary, the primary turns must equal the second-
the magnetic material increases the induc- and ary current multiplied by the secondary
tance of the coils so a relatively small NP = number of turns on primary. turns.
number of turns may be used to induce a
given voltage value with a small current. Example: A transformer has a primary §N ·
IP I S ¨¨ S ¸¸ (129)
A closed core having a continuous mag- of 400 turns and a secondary of 2800 turns, © NP ¹
netic path, such as that shown in Fig 4.91, and a voltage of 120 V is applied to the
also tends to ensure that practically all of primary. What voltage appears across the where:
the field set up by the current in the pri- secondary winding? IP = primary current,
mary coil will cut the turns of the second- IS = secondary current,
ary coil. For power transformers and § 2800 · NP = number of turns on primary, and
impedance-matching transformers used E S 120 V ¨ ¸ 120 V u 7 840 V
© 400 ¹ NS = number of turns on secondary.
in audio work, cores of iron strips are most
common and generally very efficient. (Notice that the number of turns is taken Example: Suppose the secondary of the
The following principles presume a co- as a known value rather than a measured transformer in the previous example is
efficient of coupling (k) of 1, that is, a quantity, so they do not limit the signifi- delivering a current of 0.20 A to a load.
perfect transformer. The value k = 1 indi- cant figures in the calculation.) Also, if What will be the primary current?
cates that all the turns of both coils link 840 V is applied to the 2800-turn winding
with all the magnetic flux lines, so that the (which then becomes the primary), the § 2800 ·
IP 0.20 A u ¨ ¸ 0.20 A u 7 1.4 A
voltage induced per turn is the same with output voltage from the 400-turn winding © 400 ¹
both coils. This condition makes the will be 120 V.
induced voltage independent of the in- Either winding of a transformer can be Although the secondary voltage is
ductance of the primary and secondary used as the primary, provided the wind- higher than the primary voltage, the sec-
inductors. Iron-core transformers for low ing has enough turns (enough inductance) ondary current is lower than the primary
frequencies most closely approach this to induce a voltage equal to the applied current, and by the same ratio. The sec-
ideal condition. Fig 4.92 illustrates the voltage without requiring an excessive ondary current in an ideal transformer is
conditions for transformer action. current. The windings must also have in- 180° out of phase with the primary cur-
sulation with a voltage rating sufficient rent, since the field in the secondary just
Voltage Ratio for the voltage present. offsets the field in the primary. The phase
For a given varying magnetic field, the relationship between the currents in the
voltage induced in a coil within the field Current or Ampere-Turns Ratio windings holds true no matter what the
is proportional to the number of turns in The current in the primary when no cur- phase difference between the current and
the coil. When the two coils of a trans- rent is taken from the secondary is called the voltage of the secondary. In fact, the
former are in the same field (which is the the magnetizing current of the trans- phase difference, if any, between voltage
case when both are wound on the same former. An ideal transformer, with no and current in the secondary winding will
closed core), it follows that the induced internal losses, would consume no power, be reflected back to the primary as an iden-
voltages will be proportional to the num- since the current through the primary in- tical phase difference.
4.56 Chapter 4
Fig 4.93 — A transformer as a network of resistances, inductances and
capacitances. Only L1 and L2 contribute to the transfer of energy.
The resistances of the transformer wind- losses include the energy required to over-
ings, R1 and R2, also cause voltage drops come the retentivity of the core’s magnetic
when there is current. Although these volt- material. Circulating currents through the Fig 4.94 — A typical transformer iron
age drops are not in phase with those core’s resistance are eddy currents, which core. The E and I pieces alternate
caused by leakage reactance, together they form part of the total core losses. These direction in successive layers to
improve the magnetic path while
result in a lower secondary voltage under losses, which add to the required magne- attenuating eddy currents in the core.
load than is indicated by the transformer tizing current, are equivalent to adding a
turns ratio. resistance in parallel with L1 in Fig 4.93.
Thus, the voltage regulation in a real
transformer is not perfect. At ac line fre- Core Construction
quencies (50 or 60 Hz), the voltage at the Audio and power transformers usually
secondary, with a reasonably well-designed employ one or another grade of silicon
transformer, should not drop more than steel as the core material. With
about 10% from open-circuit conditions permeabilities of 5000 or greater, these
to full load. The voltage drop may be con- cores saturate at flux densities approach-
siderably more than this in a transformer ing 105 lines per square inch of cross sec-
operating at voice and music frequencies, tion. The cores consist of thin insulated
because the leakage reactance increases laminations to break up potential eddy
directly with the frequency. current paths.
In addition to wire resistances and leak- Each core layer consists of an E and an
age reactances, certain stray capacitances I piece butted together, as represented in
occur in transformers. An electric field Fig 4.94. The butt point leaves a small gap.
exists between any two points having a Since the pieces in adjacent layers have a
different voltage. When current flows continuous magnetic path, however,
through a coil, each turn has a slightly dif- the flux density per unit of applied mag- Fig 4.95 — Two common transformer
ferent voltage than its adjacent turns, cre- netic force is increased and flux leakage constructions: shell and core.
ating a capacitance between turns. This reduced.
distributed capacitance appears in Fig Two core shapes are in common use, as
4.93 as C1 and C2. Another capacitance, shown in Fig 4.95. In the shell type, both
CM, appears between the two windings for windings are placed on the inner leg, while
the same reason. Moreover, transformer in the core type the primary and second-
windings can exhibit capacitance relative ary windings may be placed on separate
to nearby metal, for example, the chassis, legs, if desired. This is sometimes done
the shield and even the core. when it is necessary to minimize capaci-
Although these stray capacitances are tive effects between the primary and sec-
of little concern with power and audio ondary, or when one of the windings must
transformers, they become important as operate at very high voltage.
the frequency increases. In transformers The number of turns required in the pri-
for RF use, the stray capacitance can reso- mary for a given applied voltage is deter-
nate with either the leakage reactance or, mined by the size, shape and type of core
at lower frequencies, with the winding material used, as well as the frequency.
reactances, L1 or L2, especially under The number of turns required is inversely
very light or zero loads. In the frequency proportional to the cross-sectional area of
region around resonance, transformers no the core. As a rough indication, windings
longer exhibit the properties formulated of small power transformers frequently
above or the impedance properties to be have about six to eight turns per volt on a
Fig 4.96 — A shielded transformer: the
described below. core of 1-square-inch cross section and core plus an outer shield of magnetic
Iron-core transformers also experience have a magnetic path 10 or 12 inches in material contain nearly all of the
losses within the core itself. Hysteresis length. A longer path or smaller cross sec- magnetic field.
4.58 Chapter 4
series to a parallel value by the usual for-
mula, RP = X2 / R1.
The higher the loaded or operating Q of
the circuit, the smaller the mutual induc-
tance required for the same power trans-
fer. If both the primary and secondary
circuits consist of resonant circuits, they
can be more loosely coupled than with a
single tuned circuit for the same power
transfer. At the usual loaded Q of 10 or
greater, these circuits are quite selective,
and consequently narrowband.
Although coupling networks have to a
large measure replaced RF transformer
coupling that uses air-core transformers,
these circuits are still useful in antenna
tuning units and other circuits. For RF
work, powdered-iron toroidal cores have
generally replaced air-core inductors for
almost all applications except where the
circuit handles very high power or the coil
must be very temperature stable. Slug-
tuned solenoid coils for low-power circuits
offer the ability to tune the circuit precisely
to resonance. For either type of core, rea-
sonably accurate calculation of impedance
Fig 4.98 — The coupling of a complex impedance back into the primary circuit of a transformation is possible. It is often easier
transformer composed of nonresonant air-core inductors. to experiment to find the correct values for
maximum power transfer, however. For
further information on coupled circuits,
see the section on Tuned (Resonant) Net-
Resonant RF Transformers works in the Receivers and Transmitters,
ance loads, the value of resistance coupled
The use of at least one resonant circuit to the primary is chapter.
in place of a pair of simple reactances
eliminates the reactance from the trans- X M2 R L BROADBAND FERRITE RF
R1 (136) TRANSFORMERS
formed impedance in the primary. For 2
X2 R L 2
loaded or operating Qs of at least 10, the The design concepts and general theory
resistances of individual components is where: of ideal transformers presented earlier in
negligible. Fig 4.99 represents just one of R1 = series resistance coupled into the this chapter apply also to transformers
many configurations in which at least one primary circuit, wound on ferromagnetic-core materials
of the inductors is in a resonant circuit. XM = mutual reactance, (ferrite and powdered iron). As is the case
The reactance coupled into the primary RL = load resistance, and with stacked cores made of laminations in
circuit is cancelled if the circuit is tuned to X2 = reactance of the secondary induc- the classic I and E shapes, the core mate-
resonance while the load is connected. If tance. rial has a specific permeability factor that
the reactance of the load capacitance, CL determines the inductance of the windings
is at least 10 times any stray capacitance in The parallel impedance of the resonant versus the number of wire turns used.
the circuit, as is the case for low imped- circuit is just R1 transformed from a Toroidal cores are useful from a few
hundred hertz well into the UHF spectrum.
The principal advantage of this type of
core is the self-shielding characteristic.
Another feature is the compactness of a
transformer or inductor. Therefore, toroi-
dal-core transformers are excellent for use
not only in dc-to-dc converters, where
tape-wound steel cores are employed, but
at frequencies up to at least 1000 MHz
with the selection of the proper core mate-
rial for the range of operating frequencies.
Toroidal cores are available from micro-
miniature sizes up to several inches in
diameter. The latter can be used, as one
example, to build a 20-kW balun for use in
Fig 4.99 — An air-core transformer circuit consisting of a resonant primary circuit
antenna systems.
and an untuned secondary. RS and CS are functions of the source, while RL and CL One of the most common ferromagnetic
are functions of the load circuit. transformers used in Amateur Radio work
4.60 Chapter 4
construction appears in Fig 4.101. The key The losses in conventional transform- acteristic impedance equal to the load.
elements in this transformer are the stacks of ers depend on current and include wire, They form a choke isolating the input from
ferrite cores aligned with tubes soldered to eddy-current and hysteresis losses. In con- the output and attenuating undesirable
pc-board end plates. This style of trans- trast, transmission line transformers ex- currents, such as antenna current, from the
former is suited to high power applications, hibit voltage-dependent losses, which remainder of the transmission line to the
for example, at the input and output ports of make higher impedances and higher energy source. The result is a current or
transistor RF power amplifiers. Low-power VSWR values limiting factors in design. choke balun. Such baluns may take many
versions of this transformer can be wound Within design limits, the cancellation of forms: coiled transmission line, ferrite
on “binocular” cores having pairs of paral- flux in the cores of transmission line trans- beads placed over a length of transmission
lel holes through them. formers permits very high efficiencies line, windings on linear ferrite cores or
For further information on conventional across their passbands. Losses may be windings on ferrite toroids.
transformer matching using ferromagnetic lower than 0.1 dB with the proper core Reconfiguring the windings of Fig
materials, see the Matching Networks sec- choice. 4.102 can alter the transformer operation.
tion in the RF Power Amplifiers chapter. Transmission-line transformers can be For example, if terminal 2 is connected to
Refer to the Component Data and Refer- configured for several modes of operation, terminal 3, a positive potential gradient
ences chapter for more detailed informa- but the chief amateur use is in baluns (bal- appears across the lengths of line, result-
tion on available ferrite cores. A standard anced-to-unbalanced transformers) and in ing in a terminal 4 potential of 2 E1 with
reference on conventional broadband ununs (unbalanced-to-unbalanced trans- respect to ground. If the load is discon-
transformers using ferro-magnetic materi- formers). The basic principle behind a nected from terminal 2 and reconnected to
als is Ferromagnetic Core Design and balun appears in Fig 4.102, a representa- ground, 2 E1 appears across the load —
Applications Handbook by Doug DeMaw, tion of the classic Guanella 1:1 balun. The instead of ±E1 / 2. The product of this
W1FB, published by Prentice Hall. input and output impedances are the same, experiment is a 4:1 impedance ratio, form-
but the output is balanced about a real or ing an unun. The bootstrapping effect of
TRANSMISSION-LINE virtual center point (terminal 5). If the the new connection is applicable to many
TRANSFORMERS characteristic impedance of the transmis- other design configurations involving
Conventional transformers use flux sion line forming the inductors with num- multiple windings to achieve custom
linkages to deliver energy to the output bered terminals equals the load impedance, impedance ratios from 1:1 up to 9:1.
circuit. Transmission line transformers then E2 will equal E1. With respect to ter- Balun and unun construction for the
use transmission line modes of energy minal 5, the voltage at terminal 4 is E1 / 2, impedances of most concern to amateurs
transfer between the input and the output while the voltage at terminal 2 is –E1 / 2, requires careful selection of the feed line
terminals of the devices. Although toroi- resulting in a balanced output. used to wind the balun. Building transmis-
dal versions of these transformers physi- The small losses in properly designed sion line transformers on ferrite toroids
cally resemble toroidal conventional baluns of this order stem from the poten- may require careful attention to wire size
broadband transformers, the principles of tial gradient that exists along the length of and spacing to approximate a 50-Ω line.
operation differ significantly. Stray induc- transmission line forming the transformer. Wrapping wire with polyimide tape (one
tances and interwinding capacitances The value of this potential is –E1 / 2, and or two coatings, depending upon the wire
form part of the characteristic impedance it forms a dielectric loss that can’t be size) and then glass taping the wires
of the transmission line, largely eliminat- eliminated. Although the loss is very small together periodically produces a reason-
ing resonances that limit high frequency in well-constructed 1:1 baluns at low im- able 50-Ω transmission line. Ferrite cores
response. The limiting factors for trans- pedances, the losses climb as impedances in the permeability range of 125 to 250 are
mission line transformers include line climb (as in 4:1 baluns) and as the VSWR generally optimal for transformer wind-
length, deviations in the constructed line climbs. Both conditions yield higher volt- ings, with 1.25-inch cores suitable to
from the design value of characteristic age gradients. 300-Ω power levels and 2.4-inch cores
impedance, and parasitic capacitances and The inductors in the transmission-line usable to the 5 kW level. Special designs
inductances that are independent of the transformer are equivalent to — and may may alter the power-handling capabilities
characteristic impedance of the line. be — coiled transmission line with a char- of the core sizes. For the 1:1 balun shown
in Fig 4.102, 10 bifilar turns (#16 wire for
the smaller core and #12 wire for the
larger, both Thermaleze wire) yields a
transformer operable from 160 to 10 m.
Transmission-line transformers have
their most obvious application to anten-
nas, since they isolate the antenna currents
from the feed line, especially where a
coaxial feed line is not exactly perpen-
dicular to the antenna. The balun prevents
antenna currents from flowing on the outer
surface of the coax shielding, back to the
trans-mitting equipment. Such currents
would distort the antenna radiation pat-
tern. Appropriately designed baluns can
also transform impedance values at the
Fig 4.102 — Schematic representation of the basic Guanella “choke” balun or 1:1 same time. For example, one might use a
transmission line transformer. The inductors are a length of two-wire transmission 4:1 balun to match a 12.5-Ω Yagi antenna
line. RS is the source impedance and RL is the load impedance. impedance to a 50-Ω feed line. A 4:1 balun
4.62 Chapter 4