(R+Xl)||(R+Xc) circuit

Thread Starter

Tommer Stein

Joined Nov 27, 2015
4
hello
I need help with this circuit, i need to find the Q of this circuit
Q=W0/Bw=?
thanks for all who could help

by the way how Q call in english?
 

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Papabravo

Joined Feb 24, 2006
21,159
  1. Do you think the resonant frequency, ω0, depends on L and C alone, or do the resistors have any effect?
  2. Do you know how to find the bandwidth (BW)?
  3. In English, Q is just Q.
 

RBR1317

Joined Nov 13, 2010
713
I would think the place to start is to excite the circuit with a voltage E, and then calculate the current flowing in the circuit. I=E/Z where Z is the parallel combination of the RL & RC branches. Z=(Rl+sL)║(Rc+1/sC)

Plot the magnitude of the current vs frequency. At some point the current will be at a minimum - that point is ω0. At two nearby points the current will be 3dB above the minimum value. BW = ω2-ω1

So Q = ω0/(ω2-ω1)
 

Thread Starter

Tommer Stein

Joined Nov 27, 2015
4
  1. Do you think the resonant frequency, ω0, depends on L and C alone, or do the resistors have any effect?
  2. Do you know how to find the bandwidth (BW)?
  3. In English, Q is just Q.
i already have ω0. the problem is how i found the Bandwidth, its not the case of [im=re], i think its suppost to be with energies but i have some mistakes probably because i cant found an answer of wH and wL..
 

Thread Starter

Tommer Stein

Joined Nov 27, 2015
4
I would think the place to start is to excite the circuit with a voltage E, and then calculate the current flowing in the circuit. I=E/Z where Z is the parallel combination of the RL & RC branches. Z=(Rl+sL)║(Rc+1/sC)

Plot the magnitude of the current vs frequency. At some point the current will be at a minimum - that point is ω0. At two nearby points the current will be 3dB above the minimum value. BW = ω2-ω1

So Q = ω0/(ω2-ω1)
how i can i find the bw?
 

hsazerty2

Joined Sep 25, 2015
32
I would think the place to start is to excite the circuit with a voltage E, and then calculate the current flowing in the circuit. I=E/Z where Z is the parallel combination of the RL & RC branches. Z=(Rl+sL)║(Rc+1/sC)

Plot the magnitude of the current vs frequency. At some point the current will be at a minimum - that point is ω0. At two nearby points the current will be 3dB above the minimum value. BW = ω2-ω1

So Q = ω0/(ω2-ω1)
Why exactly would we need E and I ?
Just plot the magnitude of Z vs frequency, and to get a plot, we need to have values for the components, no ?

@Tommer Stein: can you give us ω0 that you found ?
 

e-learner

Joined Apr 25, 2015
30
did u try using the series-parallel equivalent circuit? I mean converting each of the series branch into a parallel ,which will give you two resistances , a capcitor and an induction all in parallel and u can easily combine two parallel resistances into single resistance. this will give a simple parallel RLC circuit.
 
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