Current in a RL Circuit: Difference between revisions

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Claimed by Jake Sebring on December 3, 2015 at 11:10 AM
A resistor-inductor circuit is an electric circuit that contains both a resistor, R, and an inductor, L, and is powered by a current source such as a battery. The energy conservation equation for a RL circuit is typically of the form: '''''ΔV_battery + ΔV_resistor + ΔV_inductor = 0''''' [[File:RL Circuit.png|300px|right]]
A resistor-inductor circuit is an electric circuit that contains both a resistor, R, and an inductor, L, and is powered by a current source such as a battery. The energy conservation equation for a RL circuit is typically of the form: '''''ΔV_battery + ΔV_resistor + ΔV_inductor = 0''''' [[File:RL Circuit.png|300px|right]]



Revision as of 00:12, 6 December 2015

A resistor-inductor circuit is an electric circuit that contains both a resistor, R, and an inductor, L, and is powered by a current source such as a battery. The energy conservation equation for a RL circuit is typically of the form: ΔV_battery + ΔV_resistor + ΔV_inductor = 0

The Main Idea

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A Mathematical Model

ΔV_battery + ΔV_resistor + ΔV_inductor = 0


Emf_battery - RI - L(dI/dt) = 0

A Computational Model

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External links

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References

http://cnx.org/contents/7025ec30-2efe-449f-8475-089c3063433f@3.1:9/MATH-1508-(Laboratory)-Enginee