INTRODUCTION
1.1 Overview of Text
1.2 Relationship of Circuit Analysis to Engineering
1.3 Analysis and Design
1.4 Computer-Aided Analysis
1.5 Successful Problem-Solving Strategies
READING FURTHER
CHAPTER 1 BASIC COMPONENTS AND ELECTRIC CIRCUITS
2.1 Units and Scales
2.2 Charge, Current, Voltage, and Power
2.3 Voltage and Current Sources
2.4 Ohm’s Law
SUMMARYAND REVIEW
READING FURTHER
EXERCISES
CHAPTER 2 VOLTAGE AND CURRENT LAWS
3.1 Nodes, Paths, Loops, and Branches
3.2 Kirchhoff’s Current Law
3.3 Kirchhoff’s Voltage Law
3.4 The Single-Loop Circuit
3.5 The Single-Node-Pair Circuit
3.6 Series and Parallel Connected Sources
3.7 Resistors in Series and Parallel
3.8 Voltage and Current Division
SUMMARYAND REVIEW
READING FURTHER
EXERCISES
CHAPTER 3 BASIC NODAL AND MESH ANALYSIS
4.1 Nodal Analysis
4.2 The Supernode
4.3 Mesh Analysis
4.4 The Supermesh
4.5 Nodal vs. Mesh Analysis: A Comparison
4.6 Computer-Aided Circuit Analysis SUMMARY AND REVIEW READING
FURTHER EXERCISES
CHAPTER 4 HANDY CIRCUIT ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES
5.1 Linearity and Superposition
5.2 Source Transformations
5.3 Thévenin and Norton Equivalent Circuits
5.4 Maximum Power Transfer
5.5 Delta-Wye Conversion
5.6 Selecting an Approach: A Summary of Various Techniques
CHAPTER 5 THE OPERATIONAL
6.1 Background
6.2 The Ideal Op Amp:
6.3 Cascaded Stages
6.4 Circuits for Voltage
6.5 Practical Considerations
6.6 Comparators and
CHAPTER 6 CAPACITORS AND
7.1 The Capacitor
7.2 The Inductor
7.3 Inductance and
7.4 Consequences
7.5 Simple Op Amp
7.6 Duality
7.7 Modeling Capacitors and Inductors with PSpice
CHAPTER 7
BASIC RL AND RC CIRCUITS
8.1 The Source-Free RL Circuit
8.2 Properties of the Exponential Response
8.3 The Source-Free RC Circuit
8.4 A More General Perspective
8.5 The Unit-Step Function
8.6 Driven RL Circuits
8.7 Natural and Forced Response
8.8 Driven RC Circuits
8.9 Predicting the Response of Sequentially Switched Circuits
CHAPTER 8
THE RLC CIRCUIT 1
9.1 The Source-Free Parallel Circuit 1
9.2 The Overdamped Parallel RLC Circuit
9.3 Critical Damping
9.4 The Underdamped Parallel RLC Circuit
9.5 The Source-Free Series RLC Circuit
9.6 The Complete Response of the RLC Circuit
9.7 The Lossless LC Circuit
CHAPTER 9 SUMMARY AND REVIEW READING FURTHER EXERCISES SINUSOIDAL
STEADY-STATE ANALYSIS
10.1 Characteristics of Sinusoids
10.2 Forced Response to Sinusoidal Functions
10.3 The Complex Forcing Function
10.4 The Phasor
10.5 Impedance and Admittance
10.6 Nodal and Mesh Analysis
10.7 Superposition, Source Transformations and Thévenin’s
Theorem
10.8 Phasor Diagrams
CHAPTER 10 AC CIRCUIT POWER ANALYSIS
11.1 Instantaneous Power
11.2 Average Power
11.3 Effective Values of Current and Voltage
11.4 Apparent Power and Power Factor
11.5 Complex Power
CHAPTER 11 POLYPHASE CIRCUITS
12.1 Polyphase Systems
12.2 Single-Phase Three-Wire Systems
12.3 Three-Phase Y-Y Connection
12.4 The Delta _ Connection
12.5 Power Measurement in Three-Phase Systems
CHAPTER 12 MAGNETICALLY COUPLED CIRCUITS
13.1 Mutual Inductance
13.2 Energy Considerations
13.3 The Linear Transformer
13.4 The Ideal Transformer
CHAPTER 13 COMPLEX FREQUENCY AND THE LAPLACE TRANSFORM 3
14.1 Complex Frequency 3
14.2 The Damped Sinusoidal Forcing Function
14.3 Definition of the