Confusion with Nodal Analysis w/ Sources

AI Thread Summary
Nodal analysis can be confusing, especially when dealing with voltage sources and their polarities. The voltage at a node is influenced by the reference point, which determines whether a voltage is considered positive or negative. In this case, the 24V source has its positive terminal connected to ground, making the voltage at the other side of the 6-ohm resistor -24V. The correct terms in the nodal equation depend on understanding these voltage references, not the direction of current flow. Properly identifying these voltages is crucial for accurate analysis and solving circuit problems.
RiceKernel
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
Hi , I'm currently stuck on a problem that requires to be solved with nodal analysis.

I'm confused to what signs should I use when there's a voltage source in the loop.

The problem:
lol2-1.png


I already know the answer from the solutions but what I found is at V_0 :

(V0 - 60V)/12 + V0/12 + (V0 -24V)/6 = 0

This is horrendously incorrect but I can't understand why . I know current flows from higher potential to lower so if that was the case then my first term would be correct (matches solution) ; the 2nd term is also correct (V0-0V)/12 but the last term is incorrect. The correct term would be (VO - (-24V))/6 and I really don't know why? Can someone explain that to me? Even for the first term, I just got lucky by putting the correct sign but I want to know why and how does the sign vary.

Oh and if anyone wants the answer , V0= 3V. Power in resistors are easy to find once the currents and voltages are found.

Thanks,
GT
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Because 24V voltage source has a positive terminal connected to gnd and the minus terminal to 6 ohm resistor.
And this is why voltage at right side of a 6 ohm resistor is -24V ( 24 voltages lower than voltage at GND).

The reference point determines whether we have a positive or negative voltage.
See this example
32.PNG
 
Last edited:
Does this apply regardless of the direction of the current(s) ?
 
RiceKernel said:
Does this apply regardless of the direction of the current(s) ?
In this case the current direction doesn't matter here. Because only the voltage source and the reference point (GND) determines the voltage polarity.
And this is why we have -24V and 60V regardless of the direction of the currents.
 
Very basic question. Consider a 3-terminal device with terminals say A,B,C. Kirchhoff Current Law (KCL) and Kirchhoff Voltage Law (KVL) establish two relationships between the 3 currents entering the terminals and the 3 terminal's voltage pairs respectively. So we have 2 equations in 6 unknowns. To proceed further we need two more (independent) equations in order to solve the circuit the 3-terminal device is connected to (basically one treats such a device as an unbalanced two-port...
Thread 'Weird near-field phenomenon I get in my EM simulation'
I recently made a basic simulation of wire antennas and I am not sure if the near field in my simulation is modeled correctly. One of the things that worry me is the fact that sometimes I see in my simulation "movements" in the near field that seems to be faster than the speed of wave propagation I defined (the speed of light in the simulation). Specifically I see "nodes" of low amplitude in the E field that are quickly "emitted" from the antenna and then slow down as they approach the far...
Back
Top