📚 DC FUNDAMENTALS • SET 1

Ohm's Law | Resistance | Resistivity | Conductance | NOTES ONLY

⚡ 1. OHM'S LAW

Ohm's Law states that the electric current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the voltage across the two points, provided the temperature remains constant.

V = I × R   |   I = V / R   |   R = V / I
  • V = Voltage (Volts) — Electrical pressure
  • I = Current (Amperes) — Flow of electrons
  • R = Resistance (Ohms, Ω) — Opposition to current

📌 Key Point: Current is directly proportional to voltage (I ∝ V) and inversely proportional to resistance (I ∝ 1/R). Graph of V vs I is a straight line through origin.

🔧 2. RESISTANCE (R)

Resistance is the property of a material that opposes the flow of electric current. It converts electrical energy into heat.

Factors Affecting Resistance

  • Length (l): R ∝ l (Longer wire = Higher resistance)
  • Cross-sectional Area (A): R ∝ 1/A (Thicker wire = Lower resistance)
  • Material: Different materials have different resistivities
  • Temperature: Resistance changes with temperature
R = ρ × (l / A)

where ρ (rho) = resistivity of the material (Ω-m)

📊 3. RESISTIVITY (ρ)

Resistivity is the resistance of a unit cube of a material (1m × 1m × 1m). It is a material property and does not depend on the shape or size of the conductor.

ρ = (R × A) / l   (Unit: Ohm-metre, Ω-m)

Resistivity depends ONLY on:

  • Nature of the material
  • Temperature
MaterialResistivity at 20°C (Ω-m)Classification
Silver (Ag)1.59 × 10⁻⁸Best conductor
Copper (Cu)1.68 × 10⁻⁸Excellent conductor
Gold (Au)2.40 × 10⁻⁸Good conductor
Aluminum (Al)2.65 × 10⁻⁸Good conductor
Tungsten (W)5.60 × 10⁻⁸Conductor (lamp filament)
Iron (Fe)9.71 × 10⁻⁸Fair conductor
Nichrome (alloy)100 × 10⁻⁸Heating element

⚠️ Important: Resistivity depends ONLY on material, NOT on length or area of cross section. Lower resistivity = Better conductor.

🔌 4. CONDUCTANCE (G) & CONDUCTIVITY (σ)

Conductance is the reciprocal of resistance — it measures how easily current flows through a material.

G = 1 / R   (Unit: Siemens S or mho)

Conductivity (σ) is the reciprocal of resistivity.

σ = 1 / ρ   (Unit: Siemens per metre, S/m)
  • Higher conductance = Lower resistance
  • Higher conductivity = Better conductor
  • For a conductor: G = σ × (A / l)
📋 5. QUICK REFERENCE TABLE
QuantitySymbolUnitFormula
VoltageVVolt (V)V = I × R
CurrentIAmpere (A)I = V / R
ResistanceROhm (Ω)R = V / I = ρ × (l/A)
ResistivityρOhm-metre (Ω-m)ρ = (R × A) / l
ConductanceGSiemens (S) / mhoG = 1 / R
ConductivityσSiemens/metre (S/m)σ = 1 / ρ
📝 6. IMPORTANT FORMULAS (REMEMBER)
V = I × R   |   I = V / R   |   R = V / I
R = ρ × (l / A)   |   ρ = (R × A) / l
G = 1 / R   |   σ = 1 / ρ
💡 7. KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER
  • Ohm's Law is valid only if temperature remains constant
  • Resistance is a property of the component (depends on dimensions)
  • Resistivity is a property of the material (independent of dimensions)
  • Silver is the best conductor (lowest resistivity)
  • Nichrome has high resistivity — used in heating elements
  • Conductance is the opposite of resistance (easier flow)
🔷 SET 2: TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT & RTD 🔷
🌡️ 8. TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT OF RESISTANCE (α)

The temperature coefficient of resistance (α) indicates how much the resistance of a material changes with temperature.

Rt = R0 × (1 + α0 × t)
MaterialTemperature Coefficient (α)Behavior
Copper+0.00393 /°CPositive (R ↑ as T ↑)
Aluminum+0.00403 /°CPositive
Nichrome+0.00017 /°CVery small (almost constant)
Carbon-0.0005 /°CNegative (R ↓ as T ↑)
GermaniumNegativeSemiconductor
📈 9. POSITIVE vs NEGATIVE TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT

Positive Temperature Coefficient (PTC)

  • Resistance increases as temperature increases
  • Metals: Copper, Aluminum, Iron, Silver, Gold, Tungsten
  • Reason: Increased atomic vibrations impede electron flow

Negative Temperature Coefficient (NTC)

  • Resistance decreases as temperature increases
  • Insulators & Semiconductors: Carbon, Germanium, Silicon
  • Reason: More electrons gain energy to jump to conduction band

📌 Key Point: Insulators have NTC (Negative Temperature Coefficient). As temperature increases, their resistance decreases.

🔬 10. RESISTANCE TEMPERATURE DETECTOR (RTD)

An RTD is a device whose resistance changes significantly with temperature. It is used for temperature measurement.

For Pt100: R0 = 100Ω at 0°C
R100 = 138.5Ω at 100°C
📌 Applications: Industrial temperature measurement, HVAC, automotive sensors, medical equipment
🧪 11. THERMISTORS

A thermistor is a type of RTD made from semiconductor materials. It is highly sensitive to temperature changes.

TypeTemperature CoefficientBehaviorApplication
NTC ThermistorNegativeResistance ↓ as T ↑Temperature sensing, inrush current limiting
PTC ThermistorPositiveResistance ↑ as T ↑Overcurrent protection, self-resetting fuses
🔌 12. INSULATORS

Insulators are materials that do not allow electric current to flow easily. They have very high resistivity.

⚠️ Important: Insulators have a negative temperature coefficient of resistance. As temperature increases, more electrons gain enough energy to move into the conduction band, which reduces resistance.

📊 13. OHMIC vs NON-OHMIC RESISTORS
TypeDefinitionExamples
Ohmic ResistorFollows Ohm's Law (V ∝ I) — constant resistanceNichrome, Copper, Constantan, Manganin
Non-Ohmic ResistorDoes NOT follow Ohm's Law — resistance changes with voltage/currentDiode, Thermistor, LDR, Transistor
🔍 Example: Nichrome is an ohmic resistor (used in heating elements). Germanium, Diamond, Diode are non-ohmic.
📋 14. QUICK REFERENCE TABLE
Material TypeTemperature CoefficientResistance with ↑ Temperature
Metals (Cu, Al, Fe, Ag)Positive (+)Increases
Insulators (Glass, Rubber)Negative (-)Decreases
Semiconductors (C, Ge, Si)Negative (-)Decreases
Alloys (Nichrome, Constantan)Very small (~0)}.\]
Almost constant
📝 15. KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER
🔷 SET 3: ELECTRICAL ENERGY, POWER & BATTERY CAPACITY 🔷
⚡ 16. ELECTRICAL POWER (P)

Electrical Power is the rate at which electrical energy is consumed or converted into another form of energy (heat, light, mechanical, etc.).

P = V × I   |   P = I² × R   |   P = V² / R

📌 Key Point: 1 Watt = 1 Joule per second. Power is the rate of energy consumption.

🔋 17. ELECTRICAL ENERGY (E)

Electrical Energy is the total amount of electrical work done or power consumed over a period of time.

E = P × t   |   E = V × I × t
Practical unit: 1 kWh = 1000 Watts × 3600 seconds = 3.6 × 10⁶ Joules
🔍 Example: A 100W bulb running for 10 hours consumes:
Energy = 100W × 10h = 1000 Wh = 1 kWh (1 unit of electricity)
🔥 18. HEAT PRODUCED IN A RESISTOR (Joule's Law)

When current flows through a resistor, electrical energy is converted into heat energy. This is known as Joule Heating or I²R loss.

H = I² × R × t   |   H = V × I × t   |   H = (V² / R) × t

⚠️ Important: Heat produced is directly proportional to:

  • Square of current (I²)
  • Resistance (R)
  • Time (t)

🔋 19. BATTERY CAPACITY (Ah)

Battery capacity is the amount of charge a battery can store and deliver. It is measured in Ampere-hours (Ah).

Capacity (Ah) = Current (A) × Time (hours)
Time (hours) = Capacity (Ah) / Current (A)
🔍 Example: A wristwatch mercury cell has 200 mAh capacity and draws 15 μA.
Hours = 0.2 Ah / 0.000015 A = 13,334 hours ≈ 18.5 months
💡 20. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POWER, VOLTAGE, CURRENT, RESISTANCE
GivenFormula for Power (P)Formula for Current (I)Formula for Resistance (R)
V and IP = V × II = P / VR = V / I
V and RP = V² / RI = V / RR = V² / P
I and RP = I² × RI = √(P / R)R = P / I²
📊 21. POWER RATING OF RESISTORS

Resistors have a power rating (in Watts) indicating how much heat they can safely dissipate without damage.

Resistor TypeTypical Power RatingApplication Carbon Composition1/8W to 2WGeneral purpose electronics Metal Film1/8W to 5WPrecision circuits Wirewound5W to 500WHigh power applications, heating elements

⚠️ Important: If a resistor dissipates more power than its rating, it will overheat and burn out.

📋 22. QUICK REFERENCE TABLE
QuantitySymbolUnitFormula
PowerPWatt (W)P = V × I = I²R = V²/R
EnergyEJoule (J) / kWhE = P × t = V × I × t
HeatHJoule (J)H = I² × R × t
Battery CapacityAhAmpere-hour (Ah)Ah = I × t (hours)
📝 23. KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER
🔷 SET 4: KIRCHHOFF'S LAWS & SERIES-PARALLEL CIRCUITS 🔷
🔀 24. KIRCHHOFF'S CURRENT LAW (KCL)

Kirchhoff's Current Law (KCL) states that the total current entering a node (junction) equals the total current leaving the node. It is based on the conservation of charge.

Σ Iin = Σ Iout
🔍 Example: If 5A enters a node, and two branches leave with 2A and 3A → 5A = 2A + 3A ✓
🔄 25. KIRCHHOFF'S VOLTAGE LAW (KVL)

Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL) states that the sum of all voltages around any closed loop in a circuit equals zero. It is based on the conservation of energy.

Σ Vrise = Σ Vdrop   or   Σ V = 0
🔍 Example: In a series circuit with battery 12V and resistors 5V + 7V drop → 12V = 5V + 7V ✓
🔗 26. SERIES CIRCUIT CHARACTERISTICS

Components connected end-to-end so the same current flows through all of them.

PropertyRuleFormula
CurrentSame through all componentsIT = I1 = I2 = I3
VoltageDivided among componentsVT = V1 + V2 + V3
ResistanceAdditiveRT = R1 + R2 + R3
PowerAdditivePT = P1 + P2 + P3
Voltage Division Rule: Vx = VT × (Rx / RT)

📌 Key Point: In series circuit, total resistance is always greater than the largest individual resistance.

🔀 27. PARALLEL CIRCUIT CHARACTERISTICS

Components connected across the same voltage source, so same voltage appears across each.

PropertyRuleFormula
VoltageSame across all componentsVT = V1 = V2 = V3
CurrentDivided among branchesIT = I1 + I2 + I3
ResistanceReciprocal sum1/RT = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3
ConductanceAdditiveGT = G1 + G2 + G3
PowerAdditivePT = P1 + P2 + P3
Current Division Rule: Ix = IT × (RT / Rx)   or   Ix = IT × (Gx / GT)

📌 Key Point: In parallel circuit, total resistance is always less than the smallest individual resistance.

🔗 28. SERIES-PARALLEL COMBINATIONS

Most practical circuits are combinations of series and parallel connections.

Steps to Solve Series-Parallel Circuits:

  • Identify which resistors are in series and which are in parallel
  • Simplify parallel combinations first (using 1/RT = 1/R1 + 1/R2)
  • Simplify series combinations (using RT = R1 + R2)
  • Repeat until only one equivalent resistance remains
  • Use voltage and current division rules as needed
🔍 Example: Three resistors 2Ω, 3Ω, 6Ω.
• All in series: RT = 2+3+6 = 11Ω
• All in parallel: 1/RT = 1/2+1/3+1/6 = 1 → RT = 1Ω
• 2Ω in series with parallel combination of 3Ω & 6Ω: Rp = (3×6)/(3+6)=2Ω, RT = 2+2=4Ω
📊 29. SPECIAL FORMULAS
ConfigurationEqual Resistors (n, each = R)Two Resistors (R₁, R₂) SeriesRT = n × RRT = R₁ + R₂ ParallelRT = R / nRT = (R₁ × R₂) / (R₁ + R₂)
📝 30. KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER
🔷 SET 5: THEVENIN, NORTON & SUPERPOSITION THEOREMS 🔷
🔧 31. THEVENIN'S THEOREM

Thevenin's Theorem states that any linear circuit containing voltage sources, current sources, and resistances can be replaced by a single voltage source (VTH) in series with a single resistance (RTH) connected across the load.

VTH = Open-circuit voltage across the load terminals
RTH = Equivalent resistance seen from load terminals (all sources deactivated)
🔍 Example: A 5V battery with 2Ω internal resistance → VTH = 5V, RTH = 2Ω
🔧 32. NORTON'S THEOREM

Norton's Theorem states that any linear circuit can be replaced by a single current source (IN) in parallel with a single resistance (RN) connected across the load.

IN = Short-circuit current through the load terminals
RN = Equivalent resistance seen from load terminals (same as RTH)
🔄 33. SOURCE TRANSFORMATION

Source transformation is the process of converting a voltage source in series with a resistor into a current source in parallel with the same resistor, and vice versa.

Voltage Source → Current Source: Is = Vs / R, R same in parallel
Current Source → Voltage Source: Vs = Is × R, R same in series
🔍 Example: 5V source with 2Ω series resistance → 2.5A source with 2Ω parallel resistance
⚡ 34. SUPERPOSITION THEOREM

Superposition Theorem states that in a linear circuit with multiple independent sources, the response (voltage or current) in any element is the algebraic sum of the responses caused by each source acting alone.

📌 Key Point: Superposition applies only to linear circuits (resistors, capacitors, inductors). It does NOT apply to power calculations (P = I²R).

📊 35. COMPARISON: THEVENIN vs NORTON
FeatureTheveninNorton
EquivalentVoltage source in series with RTHCurrent source in parallel with RN
RTH vs RNRTH = RNRN = RTH
ValueVTH = Open-circuit voltageIN = Short-circuit current
ConversionIN = VTH / RTHVTH = IN × RN
📝 36. KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER
🔷 SET 6: ADVANCED NUMERICALS & EQUIVALENT RESISTANCE 🔷
🧮 37. EQUIVALENT RESISTANCE TRICKS

For Parallel Resistors:

  • Equivalent resistance is always less than the smallest resistor in parallel
  • For two resistors: Req = (R₁ × R₂) / (R₁ + R₂)
  • For equal resistors (n, each = R): Req = R / n

For Series Resistors:

  • Equivalent resistance is always greater than the largest resistor in series
  • For equal resistors (n, each = R): Req = n × R
💡 38. MAXIMUM POWER TRANSFER THEOREM

Maximum Power Transfer Theorem states that maximum power is delivered to the load when the load resistance equals the source resistance (RL = RTH).

Pmax = VTH² / (4 × RTH)
🔍 Example: If VTH = 10V, RTH = 5Ω, then RL = 5Ω for max power.
Pmax = 10² / (4×5) = 100/20 = 5W
⚠️ 39. FUSE RATING & OVERCURRENT PROTECTION

A fuse is a protective device that melts and breaks the circuit when current exceeds its rated value.

📌 Key Point: Fuse rating means the fuse will melt if current exceeds that value for a specified time.

🔍 40. OPEN vs SHORT CIRCUIT
ConditionResistanceCurrentVoltageOhmmeter Reading
Open CircuitInfinite (∞)ZeroFull source voltageInfinite (∞)
Short CircuitZero (0)Very highZeroZero (0)
📋 41. QUICK REFERENCE: SERIES vs PARALLEL
ParameterSeries CircuitParallel Circuit
CurrentSame in all componentsDivided among branches
VoltageDivided among componentsSame across all branches
ResistanceRT = R₁ + R₂ + ...1/RT = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + ...
Conductance1/GT = 1/G₁ + 1/G₂ + ...GT = G₁ + G₂ + ...
PowerPT = P₁ + P₂ + ...PT = P₁ + P₂ + ...
Voltage DividerVx = VT × (Rx/RT)Not applicable
Current DividerNot applicableIx = IT × (RT/Rx)
📝 42. KEY FORMULAS SUMMARY
Ohm's Law: V = I × R
Power: P = V × I = I²R = V²/R
Energy: E = P × t
Series R: RT = R₁ + R₂ + ...
Parallel R: 1/RT = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + ...
Two Resistors Parallel: RT = (R₁ × R₂)/(R₁ + R₂)
Voltage Divider: Vx = VT × (Rx/RT)
Current Divider: Ix = IT × (RT/Rx)

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