Series and parallel circuits |
In electrical circuits series and
parallel are two basic ways of wiring components. The naming comes after the method of attaching components,
i.e. one after the other, or next to each other. As a demonstration, consider a very simple circuit consisting of two lightbulbs
and one 9V battery. If a wire joins the battery to
one bulb, to the next bulb, then back to the battery, in one continuous loop, the bulbs are said to be in series. If, on the
other hand, each bulb is wired separately to the battery in two loops, the bulbs are said to be in parallel.
The measurable quantities used here are R, resistance, measured in ohms (Ω), I,
current, measured in amperes (A) (coulombs
per second), and V, voltage, measured in volts (V) (joules per coulomb).
Series circuits
Series circuits are sometimes called cascade-coupled or daisy
chain-coupled.
The same current has to pass through all the
components in the series. An ammeter placed anywhere in the circuit would measure the
same amount.
- To find the total resistance of all the components,
add together the individual resistances of each component;
-
- Rtotal = R1 + R2 + ... +
Rn
- for components in series, having resistances R1, R2, etc.
- To find the current, I, use Ohm's law.
- I = V/Rtotal
- To find the voltage across any particular component with resistance
Ri , use Ohm's law again.
- V=IRi
- Where I is the current, as calculated above.
Note that the components divide the voltage according to their resistances, so, in the case of two resistors,
V1/V2 = R1/R2
Inductors follow the same law, in that the total inductance of inductors in series is equal to the sum of their individual inductances:
-
-
Capacitors follow a different law. The total capacitance of capacitors in series is equal to the reciprocal of the sum of the reciprocals of their
individual capacitances:
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Parallel circuits
The voltage is the same across all the components in parallel.
- To find the total current, I, use Ohm's Law on each loop,
then sum (See Kirchhoff's circuit laws for an
explanation of why this works). Factoring out the voltage (which, again, is the same across all components) gives:
-
- To find the total resistance of all the components,
add together the individual reciprocal of each resistance of each
component, and take the reciprocal;
-
- 1 / Rtotal = 1 / R1 + 1 / R2 + ... + 1 /
Rn
- for components in parallel, having resistances R1, R2, etc.
The above rule can be calculated by using Ohm's law for the whole circuit
- Rtotal =V/Itotal
and substituting for Itotal
- To find the current in any particular component
with resistance Ri , use Ohm's law again.
- Ii = V/Ri
Note, that the components divide the current according to their reciprocal resistances, so, in the case of two
resistors, I1/I2 =
R2/R1
Inductors follow the same law, in that the total inductance of inductors in parallel is equal to the reciprocal of the sum of the reciprocals of their
individual inductances:
-
-
Capacitors follow a different law. The total capacitance of capacitors in parallel is equal to the sum of their individual capacitances:
-
-
Notation
The parallel property can be represented in equations by two vertical lines "||" (as in geometry) to simplify equations. For
two resistors,
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