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Final 2

This document contains the final exam for an electrical engineering circuit analysis course. The exam consists of 6 problems related to circuit analysis concepts like determining energy dissipation, power dissipation in parallel resistors, superposition theorem, network transformations, maximum power transfer, and Thevenin/Norton equivalents.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views

Final 2

This document contains the final exam for an electrical engineering circuit analysis course. The exam consists of 6 problems related to circuit analysis concepts like determining energy dissipation, power dissipation in parallel resistors, superposition theorem, network transformations, maximum power transfer, and Thevenin/Norton equivalents.

Uploaded by

awaisjinnah
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY EE 112 Electric Circuit Analysis I FINAL EXAM Name:______________________ Section

#:______ 1 (15) 2 (10) 3 (20) FALL 2003

Last 4 digits of Student ID:_______________

4(15)

5 (20)

6(20)

Total (100)

PROBLEM #1 The waveforms for the current through and the voltage across a certain resistor are as shown in the following figures. Determine the energy dissipated.

v(t)/V 3 2 1 0 4 8 12 t/s

i(t)/A

12

t/s

PROBLEM #2 An unspecified resistance, R, and a 12 resistor are both connected across a 24 V source in parallel. The power dissipated by R is 12 W. Determine the value of R and the total power delivered by the source.

PROBLEM #3 In the following circuit, find Vout by superposition.

120

30 55 V

88 V 60 30 + Va -

10
+ 2Va -

90

+ Vout
_

PROBLEM #4 Transform the following network to a single voltage source

14 V

9A

3A

10

8V

PROBLEM #5 In the following circuit, determine the value of the load to be placed across terminals a-b in order for the load to draw maximum power. Then determine the value of this power.

100

200

360 V

800
o a

500

300

1200
o b

PROBLEM #6 A Thevenin equivalent can also be determined from measurements made at the pair of terminals of interest. Assume the following measurements were made at the terminals a,b in the circuit below. When a 15 k resistor is connected to the terminals a,b, the voltage vab is measured and found to be 45 V. When a 5 k resistor is connected to the terminals a,b, the voltage is measured and found to be 25 V. Find the Thevenin equivalent and Norton equivalent of the network with respect to the terminals a,b.

Linear resistive circuit with independent and dependent sources

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