Parallel Circuits vs. Series Circuits*
Claimed by Christina Zhao Fall 2018 Claimed by Brandon Burnette Spring 2017
Parallel Circuits vs. Series Circuits
A typical circuit consists of a power source, usually a battery, and electrical elements such as resistors and capacitors. Resistors include lightbulbs and do not provide power. Resistors, depending on how they are positioned in a circuit, reduces the voltage or the current that passes through them, and can change the equivalent, or total resistance in a circuit.
Resistors connected in series are attached to the power source in a way that there are no nodes where the current splits. Therefore, according to the node rule, the current flowing through each resistor is the same. However, the voltage drop across each resistor is not equal for every resistor. If these resistors were lightbulbs, they would be connected in line with the battery. The relative brightness decreases across each bulb, making series connections not ideal for something such as house wiring. This drop is consistent with the loop rule, which states that around a full loop of a circuit, the potential difference is 0.
Resistors connected in parallel are connected to a power source but are on different branches of wire, meaning that the resistors experience the same potential difference but due to being connected after different nodes of the circuit, have different currents flowing across them. The branches of a basic parallel circuit looks like rungs of a ladder. If these resistors were lightbulbs, they are connected from a common point connected to the high potential of the battery.
A Mathematical Model
A ohmic circuit is a set of resistors linked together in an unique combination. It can also includes components such as bulbs, heaters and meters as long as they can be considered ohmic. In other words, if all components in a circuit only release heat when connected to a power source like battery, then the circuit is ohmic, and such a circuit is easy to analyze when components are connected in parallel or in series by using Ohm's law. We may need to use other laws when analyzing non-ohmic circuits. Any resistors may become non-ohmic under very high voltage, and some may be so under low voltage.
A Computational Model
For a purely in-series circuit, (or purely in-series combination of resistors)
[math]\displaystyle{ U_{total}=U_{1}+U_{2}+U_{3}+...+U_{n} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ I_{total}=I_{1}=I_{2}=I_{3}=...=I_{n} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ R_{total} = R_{1} + R_{2} + R_{3} + ... + R_{n} }[/math]
if there are n ohmic components in the circuit connected in series.
For a purely in-parallel circuit, (or purely in-parallel combination of resistors)
[math]\displaystyle{ U_{total} = U_{1} = U_{2} = U_{3} = ... = U_{n} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ I_{total} = I_{1} + I_{2} + I_{3} + ... + I_{n} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ {\frac{1}{R}_{total}} = {\frac{1}{R}_{1}} +{\frac{1}{R}_{2}} + {\frac{1}{R}_{3}} + ... + {\frac{1}{R}_{n}} }[/math]
For ohmic circuits,
When a circuit is analyzed, cut up circuits into purely in-series combination of components or purely in-parallel combination of components, calculate resistance of each combination of components. Reduce the circuit until it is purely in-series or in-parallel and calculate the current, total resistance and potential difference between two ends of each component.
How do I remember this?
In order to tell the difference between parallel and series circuits, I like to think of current as being equivalent to water running through pipes. In a straight line, the same amount of water passes through every part of the pipe. Current behaves the same way. So in series circuit the same current runs through all pieces. However, the parallel circuit is equivalent to a pipe with branches. These branches lead to the current being proportionally split by the size of the branch, just like a circuit in parallel.
Examples
A visual Example
Parallel Circuit
This shows an example of a simple circuit consisting of a battery and two lightbulbs wired in parallel. You will notice that both of the bulbs are bright because the same voltage is going across each of them.Brightness is proportional to voltage, a higher voltage produces a brighter light. In this circuit the lightbulbs are equivalent to a resistor. They have current running through them equal to half the total current and all of the voltage the battery puts out.
Series Circuit
This shows an example of a simple circuit consisting of a battery and two lightbulbs wired in series. You will notice that both of the bulbs are dim because half of the total voltage is going across each of them.Brightness is proportional to voltage, a higher voltage produces a brighter light. So, the brightness of the first example can not be acheived by this second circuit. In this circuit the lightbulbs are equivalent to a resistor. They have the same amount of current running through each of them.
Simple
- Purely in-series:
- Purely in-parallel:
Middling
- simple combination of one in-series component or one in-parallel component:
Difficult
- complex combination of in-series and in-parallel components:
Connectedness
In complex applications, resistors are combined in both series and parallel to manage the voltage and current in the circuit. When connected in parallel, the current from the power source (usually a battery) is split, increasing the total current. Adding resistors in parallel also decreases the resistance, so to increase resistance, more resistors must be connected in series.
The more complex these circuits, the more difficult it is to locate a problem in a circuit if it arises. Machines, such as airplanes, often have complex wiring and contain many large and complicated electrical circuits. In these non-ideal cases, troubleshooting a short circuit maybe as easy as replacing a burnt out light or separating parts of the circuit in order to try and isolate the problem and locate the source, which maybe faulty wiring or a corroded wire. Corroded wires have a greater resistance than a normal wire, and acts as a resistor connected in series. By measuring the voltage drops, if a faulty wire is creating a great resistance that is dropping large amounts of potential, the other elements of the circuit may not work properly, thus finding the root cause of the issue.
In our daily lives, wall plugs at home are connected in parallel. If they were connected in series, the two plugs on a wall outlet would not share the potential difference (voltage) from the power source equally, so that neither plug gets the full potential difference.
History
The fundamental principles of in-series and in-parallel models, ohm's law, an empirical law, was discovered by Georg Ohm, a German scientist, in 1827[1], which states "which states that the current flow through a conductor is directly proportional to the potential difference (voltage) and inversely proportional to the resistance." It has many limitations. It can only be applied to ohmic circuits (circuits which only generate heat). Ohm was not recognized for his achievement until 1849, when he finally got the chair in University of Munich.
See also
Further reading and external links
Books, Articles or other print media on this topic
About Ohm's law: [4]
References
Georg Ohm: 1