Kirchhoff's
circuit laws are relevant with two equalities in dealing with the current and potential difference commonly known as voltage in the lumped element model of electrical circuits. They were first described in 1845 by
German physicist Gustav Kirchhoff.
This generalized the work of Georg Ohm and
preceded the work of Maxwell. Widely used in electrical
engineering, they are also called
Kirchhoff's rules or simply Kirchhoff's laws.
Both
of Kirchhoff's laws can be defined as corollaries of the Maxwell equations in
the low-frequency limit. They are accurate for DC circuits, and for AC circuits
at frequencies where the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation are very
large compared to the circuits.
Kirchhoff's current law (KCL)
The
current entering any junction is equal to the current leaving that junction. i2
+ i3 = i1 + i4
This
law is also called Kirchhoff's first law, Kirchhoff's point rule, or
Kirchhoff's junction rule (or nodal rule).
The
principle of conservation of electric charge
implies that:
At any node (junction) in an electrical circuit, the sum of currents flowing into that node is equal to the
sum of currents flowing out of that node
or
equivalently
The algebraic sum of currents in a
network of conductors meeting at a point is zero.
Recalling
that current is a signed (positive or negative) quantity reflecting direction
towards or away from a node, this principle can be stated as:
n is
the total number of branches with currents flowing towards or away from the
node.
This
formula is valid for complex
currents:
The
law is based on the conservation of charge whereby the charge (measured in
coulombs) is the product of the current (in amperes) and the time (in seconds).
Uses
A matrix version of Kirchhoff's current law is
the basis of most circuit simulation
software, such as SPICE. Kirchhoff's current law combined with
Ohm's Law is
used in nodal analysis.
KCL is
applicable to any lumped network irrespective of the nature of the network;
whether unilateral or bilateral, active or passive, linear or non-linear.
Kirchhoff's voltage law (KVL)
The
sum of all the voltages around the loop is equal to zero. v1 + v2 + v3 - v4 = 0
This
law is also called Kirchhoff's second law, Kirchhoff's loop (or mesh) rule, and
Kirchhoff's second rule.
The
principle of conservation of energy implies that
The directed sum of the electrical potential
differences (voltage) around any
closed network is zero, or:
More simply, the sum of the emfs in any closed loop is equivalent to
the sum of the potential drops in that loop, or:
The algebraic sum of the products of
the resistances of the conductors and the currents in them in a closed loop is
equal to the total emf available in that loop.
Similarly
to KCL, it can be stated as:
Here,
n is the total number of voltages measured. The voltages may also be complex:
This
law is based on the conservation of energy whereby voltage is defined as the
energy per unit charge. The total amount of energy gained per unit charge must
be equal to the amount of energy lost per unit charge, as energy and charge are
both conserved.
Generalization
In the
low-frequency limit, the voltage drop around any loop is zero. This includes
imaginary loops arranged arbitrarily in space – not limited to the loops
delineated by the circuit elements and conductors. In the low-frequency limit,
this is a corollary of Faraday's law of
induction (which is one of the Maxwell equations).
This
has practical application in situations involving "static electricity".
Limitations
KCL
and KVL both depend on the lumped element model being applicable to the circuit in
question. When the model is not applicable, the laws do not apply.
KCL,
in its usual form, is dependent on the assumption that current flows only in
conductors, and that whenever current flows into one end of a conductor it
immediately flows out the other end. This is not a safe assumption for
high-frequency AC circuits, where the lumped element model is no longer applicable. It is
often possible to improve the applicability of KCL by considering
"parasitic capacitance" distributed along the conductors. Significant violations of KCL can occur[3]
even at 60Hz, which is not a very high frequency.
In
other words, KCL is valid only if the total electric charge, , remains
constant in the region being considered. In practical cases this is always so
when KCL is applied at a geometric point. When investigating a finite region,
however, it is possible that the charge density
within the region may change. Since charge is conserved, this can only come
about by a flow of charge across the region boundary. This flow represents a
net current, and KCL is violated.
KVL is
based on the assumption that there is no fluctuating magnetic field
linking the closed loop. This is not a safe assumption for high-frequency
(short-wavelength) AC circuits. In the
presence of a changing magnetic field the electric field is not a conservative vector
field. Therefore the electric
field cannot be the gradient of any potential. That
is to say, the line integral
of the electric field around the loop is not zero, directly contradicting KVL.
It is
often possible to improve the applicability of KVL by considering
"parasitic inductance" (including mutual inductance) distributed
along the conductors. These are treated as imaginary circuit elements that
produce a voltage drop equal to the rate-of-change of the flux.
Example
Assume
an electric network consisting of two voltage sources and three resistors.
According
to the first law we have
The
second law applied to the closed circuit s1 gives
The
second law applied to the closed circuit s2 gives
Thus
we get a linear system of equations in Assuming the
solution is a
negative sign, which means that the direction of is opposite to the
assumed direction (the direction defined in the picture.
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