Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL) is another fundamental principle in electrical engineering, introduced by physicist Gustav Robert Kirchhoff. This law is rooted in the principle of energy conservation, which states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, only transferred or converted from one form to another.

KVL states that the algebraic sum of all voltages around a closed path or loop within a circuit is zero. This means that the total voltage supplied in a loop is equal to the total voltage drop across the components in that loop.

The direction of the loop around the circuit could be clockwise or anticlockwise and can start from any point. Once the loop direction is chosen, positive voltages are those where the negative terminal is encountered first, and negative voltages are those where the positive terminal is encountered first.

By applying KVL in the clockwise direction and rearranging the terms, there is an alternative form of the law: the sum of voltage drops across the components in a loop equals the sum of supplied voltages.

Consider, for example, a household lighting system where three LED lights connected in series are strung together. Each light requires three volts to turn on. By applying KVL, we can determine the voltage needed for the battery to power these lights. The battery voltage equals the sum of the voltage drop across the three lights, which is nine volts.

However, for KVL to hold true, a crucial condition must be met: a circuit cannot contain two different voltages in parallel unless they are equal. This is because, in a parallel connection, the same voltage is applied across all components, and any discrepancy would violate the law of energy conservation.

Tags
Kirchhoff s Voltage LawKVLEnergy ConservationElectrical EngineeringVoltage SumClosed CircuitVoltage DropCircuit ComponentsClockwise DirectionVoltage SupplyLED LightsSeries CircuitParallel ConnectionVoltage Equality

From Chapter 1:

article

Now Playing

1.9 : Kirchhoff's Voltage Law

Basics of Electric Circuits

327 Views

article

1.1 : Charge and Current

Basics of Electric Circuits

1.5K Views

article

1.2 : Voltage

Basics of Electric Circuits

887 Views

article

1.3 : Power and Energy

Basics of Electric Circuits

456 Views

article

1.4 : Electric Circuit Elements

Basics of Electric Circuits

418 Views

article

1.5 : Circuit Terminology

Basics of Electric Circuits

420 Views

article

1.6 : Independent and Dependent Sources

Basics of Electric Circuits

707 Views

article

1.7 : Ohm's Law

Basics of Electric Circuits

375 Views

article

1.8 : Kirchhoff's Current Law

Basics of Electric Circuits

461 Views

article

1.10 : Voltage Dividers

Basics of Electric Circuits

193 Views

article

1.11 : Current Dividers

Basics of Electric Circuits

194 Views

article

1.12 : Equivalent Resistance

Basics of Electric Circuits

255 Views

article

1.13 : Design Example: Resistive Touchscreen

Basics of Electric Circuits

183 Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved