Thevenin's Theorem Explained - DC Circuit Analysis
In this video, I explained Thevenin's Theorem, one of the circuit analysis methods. We will learn how to do circuit analysis with this theorem through examples. As you can see here, transforming a circuit into a voltage source and a resistor in series with it is known as Thevenin's Theorem. So let's try to learn how to convert a circuit into VTH thevenin voltage and RTH Thevenin equivalent resistance format.
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Пікірлер: 23
wow you explained it so easily
I believe your 2nd circuit equation is incorrect per Kirchhoffs current law, the current source is flowing into the node so it should be positive and current thru R2 (Vx/20) is flowing out so it should be negative.
@blessedbs2846
3 ай бұрын
Incoming current is equal to outgoing current, Inorder to write it in the rhs he wrote it in LHS
Thanks a bunch
Excellent 👌
@eeapplications
7 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for your interest 😊
@zoranpetrovski3051
7 ай бұрын
@@eeapplications You welcome
Quick question regarding the first example, why do we consider R1 and R3 to be in parallel rather than in series?
@Tyler-km8uu
3 ай бұрын
You have to short circuit the voltage source so R1 and R3 will have the same potential difference with respect to their terminals. Here short circuit means you basically remove the batteries
@hunterjones4234
2 ай бұрын
when you short circuit the voltage source these resistors are connected to the same nodes.
@vseodbornik
Ай бұрын
@@Tyler-km8uu You remove batteries but you also put wire there
Makes sense
Thankyou very much! I am confused about what the "current source" is in the 2nd example. Could you please give an example of what the current source might be? Thanks.
@eeapplications
7 ай бұрын
In the 2nd example, the current source is the 2A source.
@geoffedwards189
7 ай бұрын
@@eeapplications Yes I see that, but why is the current source different from the voltage source? Isn't the current coming from the voltage source? If not, what is producing the 2A current? Sorry for my lack of understanding.
@eeapplications
7 ай бұрын
In a current source, the current is constant and the voltage is variable. For example, when we set the current source to 1A, no matter which Resistor or load we connect, they will all draw 1A current. It does this by changing the output voltage. It ensures that the current remains constant. What is important here is my mind. If the voltage source is constant, it will draw different current when we connect different resistors.
can you do it with a resistent that is in paralel with V1?:(
Bro this is so much easier than what I learned at university 🤣
@sulemanrashid00
25 күн бұрын
Same
Thank you, very interesting! could you explain the formula at 5 minutes of the video? THANKS
@eeapplications
7 ай бұрын
Thank you. I'm glad you liked the video. In that formula, we did nodal analysis to find the voltage at point Vx.
2:35 why you have not use R2 9 k ohm resister when finding Vth?
@eeapplications
5 ай бұрын
Because no current flows through that resistor.