Sign In

6.13 : Norton Equivalent Circuits

Norton's theorem is a fundamental concept in the field of electrical engineering that allows for the simplification of complex AC circuits. The theorem states that any two-terminal linear network can be replaced with an equivalent circuit that consists of an impedance, which is parallel with a constant current source. Figure 1 shows the AC circuit portioned into two parts: Circuit A and Circuit B, while Figure 2 depicts the circuit obtained by replacing Circuit A by its Norton equivalent circuit.

Figure1

Figure 1: A circuit portioned into two parts

Figure2

Figure 2: Norton equivalent circuit

To calculate the value of the parallel impedance, one must replace the source with its internal impedance, resulting in a circuit with an equivalent impedance known as the Norton impedance. The Norton impedance is the same as the Thévenin impedance and is used to determine the Norton current, which is the current flowing through the circuit.

Determining the Norton current requires placing the sources back into the circuit and analyzing the open-circuit voltage, also known as the Thévenin voltage. The value of the Thévenin voltage is determined by multiplying the source current by the Thevenin impedance and is used to drop the same voltage across the load impedance when it is placed in a parallel configuration.

By using the relationship between the Norton current, the Thévenin voltage, and the Norton current values, one can determine the Norton current of the circuit. This relationship makes Norton's theorem beneficial for analyzing and designing systems containing complex AC circuits since it simplifies their analysis by breaking the circuit down into smaller, more manageable sections.

Tags
Norton s TheoremEquivalent CircuitAC CircuitsImpedanceConstant Current SourceNorton ImpedanceTh venin ImpedanceNorton CurrentOpen circuit VoltageTh venin VoltageLoad ImpedanceCircuit AnalysisElectrical Engineering

From Chapter 6:

article

Now Playing

6.13 : Norton Equivalent Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

165 Views

article

6.1 : Sinusoidal Sources

AC Circuit Analysis

159 Views

article

6.2 : Graphical and Analytic Representation of Sinusoids

AC Circuit Analysis

233 Views

article

6.3 : Phasors

AC Circuit Analysis

269 Views

article

6.4 : Phasor Arithmetics

AC Circuit Analysis

93 Views

article

6.5 : Phasor Relationships for Circuit Elements

AC Circuit Analysis

262 Views

article

6.6 : Kirchoff's Laws using Phasors

AC Circuit Analysis

176 Views

article

6.7 : Impedances and Admittance

AC Circuit Analysis

311 Views

article

6.8 : Impedance Combination

AC Circuit Analysis

149 Views

article

6.9 : Node Analysis for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

161 Views

article

6.10 : Mesh Analysis for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

208 Views

article

6.11 : Source Transformation for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

288 Views

article

6.12 : Thévenin Equivalent Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

107 Views

article

6.14 : Superposition Theorem for AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

362 Views

article

6.15 : Op Amp AC Circuits

AC Circuit Analysis

80 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved