Dependent voltage source
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A voltage source is a two-
terminal Terminal may refer to: Computing Hardware * Terminal (electronics), a device for joining electrical circuits together * Terminal (telecommunication), a device communicating over a line * Computer terminal, a set of primary input and output dev ...
device which can maintain a fixed
voltage Voltage, also known as electric pressure, electric tension, or (electric) potential difference, is the difference in electric potential between two points. In a static electric field, it corresponds to the work needed per unit of charge to ...
. An ideal voltage source can maintain the fixed voltage independent of the load resistance or the output
current Currents, Current or The Current may refer to: Science and technology * Current (fluid), the flow of a liquid or a gas ** Air current, a flow of air ** Ocean current, a current in the ocean *** Rip current, a kind of water current ** Current (stre ...
. However, a real-world voltage source cannot supply unlimited current. A voltage source is the dual of a
current source A current source is an electronic circuit that delivers or absorbs an electric current which is independent of the voltage across it. A current source is the dual of a voltage source. The term ''current sink'' is sometimes used for sources fed ...
. Real-world sources of electrical energy, such as Electric battery, batteries and Electric generator, generators, can be modeled for analysis purposes as a combination of an ideal voltage source and additional combinations of Electrical impedance, impedance elements.


Ideal voltage sources

An ideal voltage source is a two-terminal device that maintains a fixed voltage drop across its terminals. It is often used as a mathematical abstraction that simplifies the analysis of real electric circuits. If the voltage across an ideal voltage source can be specified independently of any other variable in a circuit, it is called an independent voltage source. Conversely, if the voltage across an ideal voltage source is determined by some other voltage or current in a circuit, it is called a dependent or controlled voltage source. A mathematical model of an amplifier will include dependent voltage sources whose magnitude is governed by some fixed relation to an input signal, for example.K. C. A. Smith, R. E. Alley , ''Electrical circuits: an introduction'', Cambridge University Press, 1992 , pp. 11-13 In the analysis of Fault (power engineering), faults on electrical power systems, the whole network of interconnected sources and transmission lines can be usefully replaced by an ideal (AC) voltage source and a single equivalent impedance. , - align="center" , style="padding: 1em 2em 0;", , style="padding: 1em 2em 0;", , - align="center" , Ideal Voltage Source , Current source, Ideal Current Source , - align="center" , style="padding: 1em 2em 0;", , style="padding: 1em 2em 0;", , - align="center" , Controlled Voltage Source , Controlled Current Source , - align="center" , style="padding: 1em 2em 0;", , style="padding: 1em 2em 0;", , - align="center" , Battery (electricity), Battery of cells , Single cell The internal resistance of an ideal voltage source is zero; it is able to supply or absorb any amount of current. The current through an ideal voltage source is completely determined by the external circuit. When connected to an open circuit, there is zero current and thus zero power. When connected to a load resistance, the current through the source approaches infinity as the load resistance approaches zero (a short circuit). Thus, an ideal voltage source can supply unlimited power. If two ideal independent voltage source are directly connected in Parallel circuit, parallel, they must have exactly the same voltage; Otherwise, it creates a fallacy in logic, similar to writing down the equation 1=2. Voltage sources in parallel shares the burden of current: If an exact duplicate of voltage is connected in parallel to the original one, either one of them will provide half of the electric current that the original voltage source would provide. For the remainder of the circuit, nothing has changed: These two voltage sources together provide the same voltage, and the same current as the original one alone. No real voltage source is ideal; all have a non-zero effective internal resistance, and none can supply unlimited current. However, the internal resistance of a real voltage source is effectively modeled in linear circuit analysis by combining a non-zero resistance in series with an ideal voltage source (a Thévenin's theorem, Thévenin equivalent circuit).


Comparison between voltage and current sources

Most sources of electrical energy (the mains electricity, mains, a Battery (electricity), battery) are modeled as voltage sources. An ''ideal'' voltage source provides no energy when it is loaded by an Open-circuit voltage, open circuit (i.e. an infinite Electrical impedance, impedance), but approaches infinite energy and current when the load resistance approaches zero (a short circuit). Such a theoretical device would have a zero Ohm (unit), ohm output impedance in series with the source. A real-world voltage source has a very low, but non-zero internal resistance and output impedance, often much less than 1 ohm. Conversely, a
current source A current source is an electronic circuit that delivers or absorbs an electric current which is independent of the voltage across it. A current source is the dual of a voltage source. The term ''current sink'' is sometimes used for sources fed ...
provides a constant current, as long as the load connected to the source terminals has sufficiently low impedance. An ideal current source would provide no energy to a short circuit and approach infinite energy and voltage as the load resistance approaches infinity (an open circuit). An ''ideal'' current source has an Infinity, infinite output impedance in parallel with the source. A ''real-world'' current source has a very high, but finite output impedance. In the case of transistor current sources, impedance of a few megohms (at low frequencies) is typical. Since no ideal sources of either variety exist (all real-world examples have finite and non-zero source impedance), any current source can be considered as a voltage source with the ''same'' source impedance and vice versa. Voltage sources and current sources are sometimes said to be duals of each other and any non ideal source can be converted from one to the other by applying Norton's theorem or Thévenin's theorem.


References and notes


See also

*Bandgap voltage reference *Voltage divider *Voltage reference *Voltage regulator {{DEFAULTSORT:Voltage Source Analog circuits