OK thanks for all the replies, that's exactly what I thought. Actually I think I've got it now, but here's my reasoning (prepared earlier) and my solution at the end.
n.b, the references drawn in are mine, because we have been admonished enough times to give a magnitiude, unit and reference for every value :)
Let's simplify the circuit to a 5V battery and a 2000Ω resistor, since the diodes are not relevant here. The current enters our positive reference of our resistor R
V
R is +5V and I is 2.5mA - simple.
Let's now say the battery voltage is -5V which can be expressed as
or more intuitively:
so now by KVL, +5V+V
R=0, so V
R is -5V. If I still enters the positive reference of R, do we still simply use I=V/R and get -2.5mA?
My check here is to look at the power relationships. The sign convention I prefer, because it seems simple and universal, is to
- Take the values given for V and I, be they negative or positive.
- Multiply them to give a result (negative or positive),
- which indicates energy 'travelling' in the direction indicated for conventional current.
- A negative result simply means energy traveling in the opposite direction.
- Then, a positive value of energy entering the positive reference of a circuit element is energy consumed by that element, and:
- energy entering the negative potential reference is energy supplied by that element.
- A negative value of energy entering the positive potential reference is negative energy consumed, which is interchangeable with energy supplied.
- Likewise with 'negative energy' into a negative reference, we have negative energy supplied or positive energy consumed.
So going back to the example, if V
R is -5V and I=-2.5mA, P=VI=+12.5mW. So far so good, because while voltage and current are both -ve, our conventional current reference (as shown by 'I') enters the positive reference of R so energy is consumed as expected.
But what if I got bored of the clockwise current reference and just switched it? It's arbitrary after all:
If I still =V/R we get -2.5mA into the negative reference of R so P=-2.5mA*-5V=+12.5mW supplied by the resistor. Clearly nonsense, so where have I gone wrong?
Obviously in this case I could 'just' reverse the sign, because it is a trivial example I already know the answer to. But in a more general sense, in cases where the answer is less obvoius, can I still operate with my convention as described above and add the caveat that if the conventional current reference enters the negative reference then we use V=-IR and P=-VI?
BRAINWAVE: can I use, instead of V as given, V
d; 'voltage drop
in the reference direction of conventional current'? That would mean that in the last case, since I is anticlockwise, V
d would be -(-5V)=5V, which would satisfy my sign convention. Please tell me that's right, I like my convention above, it's simple like me :)