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Tutorial EE1

This document provides examples and solutions for calculating voltage, current, resistance, and applying Ohm's law. It covers: 1) Calculating current from charge and time 2) Determining if a fuse will blow based on current 3) Calculating current from number of electrons 4) Calculating number of electrons from current and time 5) Finding current from equations for charge over time 6) Finding charge from equations for current over time 7) Finding current at different times from a graph of charge over time

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Azra Musić
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50% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views5 pages

Tutorial EE1

This document provides examples and solutions for calculating voltage, current, resistance, and applying Ohm's law. It covers: 1) Calculating current from charge and time 2) Determining if a fuse will blow based on current 3) Calculating current from number of electrons 4) Calculating number of electrons from current and time 5) Finding current from equations for charge over time 6) Finding charge from equations for current over time 7) Finding current at different times from a graph of charge over time

Uploaded by

Azra Musić
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 5

Fundamentals of Electric Circuits

Tutorial 1 -Voltage, Current, Resistance, and Ohms law


1. Find the current in amperes if 650 C of charge passes through a wire in 50 s.
Solution: Q = 650 C
T = 50 s
I = Q/ T = 650/50 = 13 A.
2. Will a fuse rated at 1 A blow if 86 C pass through it in 1.2 minute?
Solution: Q = 86 C
T = 1.2 min = 1.2 *60 second = 72 seconds
I = Q/ T = 86/ 72 = 1.194 A
Yes the fuse with 1A rating will blow.
3. If 21.847x1018 electrons pass through a wire in 12 s, find the current.
Solution: Q = 1.6*10-19*21.847*1018 = 3.49 C
I = Q/T = 3.49C/12s = 0.29 A
4. How many electrons pass through a conductor in 1 min and 30 s if the current is 4 mA?
Solution: Q = I*T = 4*10-3*90s = 0.36 C
Number of electrons Ne = Q/charge of electron = 0.36/(1.6*10 -19)
= 2.25*10 18 electrons
5. Determine the current flowing through an element if the charge flow is given by
(a) q(t) = (8t2 + 4t -2) C
(b) q(t) = 10 sin120t pC
(c) q(t) = 20e-4t C
Solution: (a) i ( t )=
(b) i ( t )=
(c) i ( t )=

d q(t )
dt

d
(8t2 + 4t -2) = (16t + 4) A
dt

d
(10 sin120t pC) = 10cos120 t *120 = 1200cos120t pA
dt
d
20e-4t C = 20e-4t (-4) = -80e-4t A
dt

6. Find the charge q(t) flowing through a device if the current is:
(a) i(t) = 3 A, q(0) = 1 C
(b) i(t) = (2t + 5) mA, q(0) = 0
(c) i(t) = 20 cos(10t + /6) A, q(0) = 2 C
Solution: (a) q(t) = i(t) dt + q(0) = 3 A dt + 1 = 3t + 1 C
(b) q(t) = (2t + 5) mA + 0 = t2 + 5t = (t2 + 5t) mC
(c) q(t) = 20 cos(10t + /6) A + 2 = 20 sin(10t + /6)/10 + 2 C
Page 1

7. The charge entering a certain element is shown in figure. Find the current at:
(a) t = 1 ms
(b) t = 6 ms
(c) t = 10 ms

Solution: First find the charge equations using the formulae for the equation of line with coordinates as
(0, 0), and (2ms, 80mC)
y 1 y 2
(xx 1)
x 1x 2
080 mC
q(t) 0 =
(t 0)
02 ms
y y 1=

q(t) = 40t C, 0 t 2 ms
q(t) = 80 mC, 2 ms t 8 ms
8 ms t 12 ms; (8 ms, 80 mC), (12 ms, 0)
q(t) 80 mC =

80 mC0
8 ms12 ms

(t 8 ms)

q(t) = 80 m 20(t 8m)


q(t) = - 20 t + 80 m + 160 m
q (t) = - 20 t + 0.24 C, 8 ms t 12 ms
The charge equations are,
q(t) = 40t C, 0 t 2 ms
q(t) = 80 mC, 2 ms t 8 ms
q (t) = - 20 t + 0.24 C, 8 ms t 12 ms
(a) t = 1 ms; i =

d
d
q ( t ) = 40 t C=40 A
dt
dt

(b) t = 6 ms; i =

d
d
q ( t ) = 80mC =0 A
dt
dt

(c) t = 10 ms; i =

d
d
q ( t ) = (20 t+ 0.24 ) C=20 A
dt
dt

Page 2

8. The current flowing past a point in a device is shown in figure. Calculate the total charge through
the point.

Solution: equation of line for the points (0,0) and (1,10) is


y 1 y 2
( xx 1)
x 1x 2
10 mA 0
i(t) 0 =
(t 0)
1 ms0
y y 1=

i(t) = 10t A , 0 t 1ms


i(t) = 10 mA , 1 t 2ms
2 ms

q(t) =

1 ms

i ( t ) dt

2 ms

10t A dt+ 10 mA dt
0

1 ms

5 [ ( 1 10 ) ( 0 ) ]+ 10 10 [ 21031 103 ]
3 2

2 ms

+ 10 m t
1 ms
1 ms

5 t2
0

= 5 10 +10 10 ( 1 103 )=15 106 C=15 C


6

9. What is the voltage between two points if 96 mJ of energy are required to move 5010 18 electrons
between the two points?
Solution: Charge of electron = 1.6 10-19 coulombs
Total charge Q = 50*1018 * 1.6 10-19 = 8.01 C
Energy required W = 96 mJ
Voltage V = W/Q = 96*10-3 J/8.01 C = 12 mV
10. The potential difference between two points in an electric circuit is 24 V. If 0.4 J of energy were
dissipated in a period of 5 ms, what would the current be between the two points?
Solution: V= 24 V , W = 0.4 J , T = 5 ms = 5*10-3 s
V = W/ Q
Q = W/ V = 0.4/ 24 = 0.01667 C
I = Q/ T = 0.01667/ 5*10-3 = 3.333 A
Page 3

11. How much charge passes through a radio battery of 9 V if the energy expended is 72 J?
Solution: V= 9 V, W = 72 J
V = W/ Q
Q = W/ V = 72/ 9 = 8 C
12. A coil consists of 2000 turn of copper wire having a cross-sectional area of 0.08mm2. The mean length
pre turn is 80 cm and the = 0.02.m. Find the resistance of the coil.
Solution: N = 2000, = 0.02.m = = 0.02 x10-6 .m
L = N x80 x10-2 m = 2000 x80 x10-2 m = 1600 m
A = 0.08mm2 =0.08 x10-6 m2
R=

l
A

0.02 x 106 x 1600


0.08 x 106

= 400

13. What is the potential drop across a 6 resistor if the current through it is 2.5 A?
Solution: V = IR , from ohm's law
V = 6*2.5A = 15 V
14. What is the current through a 72 resistor if the voltage drop across it is 12 V?
Solution: I = V/R , from ohm's law
I = 12V/72 = 0.167 A
15. The current through a 4 resistor is 7 mA. What is the power delivered to the resistor?
Solution: P = I2R = (7*10-3)2 *4 = 196*10-6 W = 196 W
16. Refer to the following figure, calculate:
a) Current Is
b) Voltage VR.

c) Power in resistance R.

Solution: Is = E/R = 12V/4k = 3 mA


VR = E = 12 V
P = I*V = 3*10-3 *12V = 36 mW
17. A small, portable black-and-white television draws 0.455 A at 9V.
a. What is the power rating of the television?
b. What is the internal resistance of the television?
c. What is the energy converted in 6 h of typical battery life?
Page 4

Solution: (a) P = I*V = 0.455A*9V = 4.095 W


(b) Rin = V/I = 9V/0.455A = 19.78
(c) W = P*t = 4.095W*6*60*60s = 88.452 kJ

18 a. If a house is supplied with 120 V, 100 A service, find the maximum power capability.
b. Can the homeowner safely operate the following loads at the same time?
5 hp motor
3000 W clothes dryer
2400 W electric range
1000 W steam iron
c. If all the appliances are used for 2 hours, how much energy is converted in kWh?
Solution: (a) maximum power capability P = V*I = 120V*100A = 12000 W
(b) Total power used = 5*746 + 3000 + 2400 + 1000 = 10130 W (1 hp = 746W)
Owner can use all the mentioned appliances, because total power used is less than maximum power
capability.
(c) W = P*t = 10130W*2h = 20260 Wh = 20.26 kWh.

Page 5

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