Are My Thevenin and Norton Equivalent Calculations Correct?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around verifying Thevenin and Norton equivalent calculations, specifically the open circuit voltage (Voc) and short circuit current (Isc). The original poster calculated Voc as V2 (4V) and Isc as 0.67 Amps using KCL at Node 1. Responses confirm that the calculations are generally correct but suggest using the current divider formula for Isc. A correction is noted regarding the influence of the controlled current source on the short circuit current path. The conversation emphasizes the importance of considering all circuit elements in calculations.
Tekneek
Messages
70
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



For this problem (pic attached) I did the open circuit calculations and found V1 (6v) and V2 (4v) and I know they are correct. However I am not sure if my Voc and Isc (open circuit voltage and short circuit current) calculations are correct.

The Attempt at a Solution



I am assuming V2 is Voc since they are in parallel? Also after creating a short circuit to find Isc, I used KCL at Node 1:

(V1/10)+(V1/5)=1
V1=3.33

So, Isc = V1/5ohms = 0.67 Amps (Because the current wouldn't flow through the branches with current dependent current source and 20ohms resistor)

Thanks for any help. Long time reader first time poster :)
 

Attachments

  • Thevenin.jpg
    Thevenin.jpg
    8.2 KB · Views: 561
Physics news on Phys.org
Tekneek said:

Homework Statement



For this problem (pic attached) I did the open circuit calculations and found V1 (6v) and V2 (4v) and I know they are correct. However I am not sure if my Voc and Isc (open circuit voltage and short circuit current) calculations are correct.

The Attempt at a Solution



I am assuming V2 is Voc since they are in parallel? Also after creating a short circuit to find Isc, I used KCL at Node 1:

(V1/10)+(V1/5)=1
V1=3.33

So, Isc = V1/5ohms = 0.67 Amps (Because the current wouldn't flow through the branches with current dependent current source and 20ohms resistor)

Thanks for any help. Long time reader first time poster :)

Hi Tekneek, Welcome to Physics Forums.

Your calculations look fine. For the short circuit current calculation you could also have used the current divider formula, since the 1A divides between the 10 Ω and 5 Ω resistors.
 
gneill said:
Hi Tekneek, Welcome to Physics Forums.

Your calculations look fine. For the short circuit current calculation you could also have used the current divider formula, since the 1A divides between the 10 Ω and 5 Ω resistors.

Thanks for the reply. How would you get the current using the Voltage divider formula?
 
Tekneek said:
Thanks for the reply. How would you get the current using the Voltage divider formula?

Current divider, not voltage divider.
 
  • Like
Likes 1 person
gneill said:
Current divider, not voltage divider.

Yeah got it. I = [(Add 10 and 5 in parallel)/5ohms]*1amp = 0.67 Amp

Thanks!
 
Tekneek said:
Yeah got it. I = [(Add 10 and 5 in parallel)/5ohms]*1amp = 0.67 Amp

Thanks!

Whoops! I just realized that the controlled current source is still in the circuit even though the output is shorted! The path for the short circuit current is separate... so it'll look like:

attachment.php?attachmentid=66653&stc=1&d=1392495914.gif


The controlled current source is going to "steal" half the current before it gets to where the short circuit is. Very sorry about that.
 

Attachments

  • Fig1.gif
    Fig1.gif
    3.2 KB · Views: 666

Similar threads

Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
7
Views
3K
Replies
14
Views
6K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
8
Views
2K
Back
Top