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Kirchhoffs Laws For Electrical Engineers - Beginners (photo credit: Jesse Mason via Youtube)
http://electrical-engineering-portal.com/kirchhos-laws-for-electrical-engineers-beginners
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Hiking up a mountain //
An analogy for visualizing Kirchhoffs Voltage Law is hiking up a mountain.
Suppose we start at the base of a mountain and hike to an altitude of 5000 feet to set
up camp for an overnight stay. Then, the next day we set off from camp and hike
farther up another 3500 feet. Deciding weve climbed high enough for two days, we set
up camp again and stay the night. The next day we hike down 6200 feet to a third
location and camp once gain. On the fourth day we hike back to our original starting
point at the base of the mountain.
We can summarize our hiking adventure as a series of rises and falls like this:
Day
Path
Day 1
A to B
+5000 feet
Day 2
B to C
+3500 feet
Day 3
C to D
-6200 feet
Day 4
D to A
-2300 feet
ABCDA
0 feet
TOTAL //
Of course, no one would tell their friends they spent four days hiking a total altitude of
0 feet, so people generally speak in terms of the highest point reached: in this case
8500 feet. However, if we track each days gain or loss in algebraic terms (maintaining
the mathematical sign, either positive or negative), we see that the end sum is zero
(and indeed must always be zero) if we finish at our starting point.
http://electrical-engineering-portal.com/kirchhos-laws-for-electrical-engineers-beginners
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If we trace a path ABCDEA, we see that the algebraic voltage sum in this loop is
zero:
Path
A to B
-4 volts
B to C
-6 volts
C to D
+5 volts
D to E
-2 volts
E to A
+7 volts
ABCDEA
0 volts
We can even trace a path that does not follow the circuit conductors or include all
http://electrical-engineering-portal.com/kirchhos-laws-for-electrical-engineers-beginners
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components, such as EDCBE, and we will see that the algebraic sum of all voltages
is still zero:
Path
A to B
+2 volts
B to C
-5 volts
C to D
+6 volts
D to E
-2 volts
E to A
-3 volts
ABCDEA
0 volts
Remember that there is no such thing as voltage at a single point; rather, voltage
exists only as a differential quantity. To intelligently speak of voltage, we must refer to
either a loss or gain of potential between two points.
Our analogy of altitude on a mountain is particularly apt. We cannot intelligently speak
of some point on the mountain as having a specific altitude unless we assume a point
of reference to measure from. If we say the mountain summit is 9200 feet high, we
usually mean 9200 feet higher than sea level, with the level of the sea being our
common reference point. However, our hiking adventure where we climbed 8500 feet in
two days did not imply that we climbed to an absolute altitude of 8500 feet above sea
level. Since I never specified the sea-level altitude at the base of the mountain, it is
impossible to calculate our absolute altitude at the end of day 2.
All you can tell from the data given is that we climbed 8500 feet above the mountain
base, wherever that happens to be with reference to sea level.
http://electrical-engineering-portal.com/kirchhos-laws-for-electrical-engineers-beginners
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In DC-powered circuits, this ground point is often the negative pole of the DC power
source. Voltage is fundamentally a quantity relative between two points: a measure of
how much potential has increased or decreased moving from one point to another.
Go back to Laws
So long as there are no leaks in this piping system, every drop of water entering the
tee must be balanced by a drop exiting the tee. For there to be a continuous mismatch
between flow rates would imply a violation of the Law of Mass Conservation.
Lets apply this principle to a real circuit, where all currents have been calculated for
us:
Arrow shows current in the direction of conventional flow notation
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At nodes
where just
two wires
connect
(such as
points A, B,
and C), the
amount of
current
going in to
the node
exactly
equals the
amount of
current going out (4 mA, in each case). At nodes where three wires join (such as
points D and E), we see one large current and two smaller currents (one 4 mA current
versus two 2 mA currents), with the directions such that the sum of the two smaller
currents form the larger current.
Just as the balance of water flow rates into and out of a piping tee
is a consequence of the Law of Mass Conservation, the balance of
electric currents flowing into and out of a circuit junction is a
consequence of the Law of Charge Conservation, another
fundamental conservation law in physics.
Go back to Laws
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Go back to Laws
Recommended EE articles //
Share with engineers //
&
'
About Author //
Edvard Csanyi
Edvard - Electrical engineer, programmer and founder of EEP. Highly specialized for
design of LV high power busbar trunking (<6300A) in power substations, buildings and
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