Introduction to Circuit Analysis and Design (Record no. 81)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 09529nam a22002177a 4500
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field LSCPL
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20130906051226.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 130216t20122011ii,ill.g |||| 001 0 eng d
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9788132205173
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency AACR2
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 621.3815
Item number GLI-I 2012 419
100 1# - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Glisson, Tildon
9 (RLIN) 205
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Introduction to Circuit Analysis and Design
Statement of responsibility, etc. /by Tildon Glisson,Jr.
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc. New Dehli :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Springer Private Ltd India,
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2012.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent xv, 768 p. :
Other physical details ill. ;
Dimensions 24 cm.
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note Index inculded
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note Preface. 1 Introduction. 1.1 Electric Circuits. 1.2 How to Study This Book. 1.3 Dimensions and Units. 1.4 Symbols and Notation. 1.5 Symbols Versus Numbers. 1.6 Presentation of Calculations. 1.7 Approximations. 1.8 Precision and Tolerance. 1.9 Engineering Notation. 1.10 Problems. 2 Current, Voltage, and Resistance. 2.1 Charge and Current. 2.2 Electric Field. 2.3 Electric Potential and Voltage. 2.4 Ohm's Law and Resistance. 2.5 Resistivity. 2.6 Conductance and Conductivity. 2.7 Resistors. 2.8 E Series, Tolerance, and Standard Resistance Values. 2.9 Resistor Marking. 2.10 Variation of Resistivity and Resistance with Temperature. 2.11 American Wire Gauge (AWG) and Metric Wire Gauge (MWG). 2.12 DC and AC. 2.13 Skin Effect and Proximity Effect. 2.14 Concluding Remark. 2.15 Problems. 3 Circuit Elements, Circuit Diagrams, and Kirchhoff's Laws. 3.1 Schematics and Circuit Diagrams. 3.2 Conductors and Connections. 3.3 Annotating Circuit Diagrams. 3.4 Series and Parallel Connections. 3.5 Open Circuits and Short Circuits. 3.6 Basic Circuit Elements: Resistors and Independent Sources. 3.7 Kirchhoff's Current Law and Node Analysis. 3.8 Kirchhoff's Voltage Law and Mesh Analysis. 3.9 Voltage and Current Dividers. 3.10 Superposition. 3.11 Problems. 4 Equivalent Circuits. 4.1 Terminal Characteristics. 4.2 Equivalent Circuits. 4.3 Source Transformations. 4.4 The'venin and Norton Equivalent Circuits. 4.5 Notation: Constant and Time-Varying Current and Voltage. 4.6 Signii-- cance of Terminal Characteristics and Equivalence. 4.7 Problems. 5 Work and Power. 5.1 Instantaneous Power and the Passive Sign Convention. 5.2 Instantaneous Power Dissipated by a Resistor: Joule's Law. 5.3 Conservation of Power. 5.4 Peak Power. 5.5 Available Power. 5.6 Time Averages. 5.7 Average Power. 5.8 Root Mean Squared (RMS) Amplitude of a Current or Voltage. 5.9 Average Power Dissipated in a Resistive Load. 5.10 Summary: Power Relations. 5.11 Notation. 5.12 Measurement of RMS Amplitude. 5.13 Dissipation Derating. 5.14 Power Dissipation in Physical Components and Circuits. 5.15 Active and Passive Devices, Loads, and Circuits. 5.16 Power Transfer and Power Transfer Efi-- ciency. 5.17 Superposition of Power. 5.18 Problems. 6 Dependent Sources and Unilateral Two-Port Circuits. 6.1 Input Resistance and Output Resistance. 6.2 Dependent Sources. 6.3 Linear Two-Port Models. 6.4 Two-Ports in Cascade. 6.5 Voltage, Current, and Power Transfer. 6.6 Transfer Characteristics, Transfer Ratios, and Gain. 6.7 Power Gain. 6.8 Gains and Relative Values in Decibels (dB). 6.9 Design Considerations. 6.10 Problems. 7 Operational Amplii-- ers I. 7.1 Operational Amplii-- er Terminals and Voltage Reference. 7.2 DC Circuit Model for an Op Amp. 7.3 The Ideal Op Amp and Some Basic Op-Amp Circuits at DC. 7.4 Feedback and Stability of Op-Amp Circuits. 7.5 Input Resistance and Output Resistance of Op-Amp Circuits. 7.6 Properties of Common Op-Amp Circuits. 7.7 Op Amp Structure and Properties. 7.8 Output Current Limit. 7.9 Input Offset Voltage. 7.10 Input Bias Currents. 7.11 Power Dissipation in Op Amps and Op-Amp Circuits. 7.12 Design Considerations. 7.13 Problems. 8 Capacitance. 8.1 Capacitance. 8.2 Capacitors. 8.3 Terminal Characteristics of an Ideal Capacitor. 8.4 Charge-Discharge Time Constant. 8.5 Capacitors in Series and Parallel. 8.6 Leakage Resistance. 8.7 Stray and Parasitic Capacitance; Capacitive Coupling. 8.8 Variation of Capacitance with Temperature. 8.9 Energy Storage and Power Dissipation in a Capacitor. 8.10 Applications. 8.11 Problems. 9 Inductance. 9.1 Magnetic Field. 9.2 Self Inductance. 9.3 Inductance of Air-Core Coils. 9.4 Inductors. 9.5 Terminal Characteristic of an Inductor. 9.6 Time Constant. 9.7 Inductors in Series and Parallel. 9.8 Energy Storage and Power dissipation in an Inductor. 9.9 Parasitic Self-Inductance. 9.10 Reducing Ripple. 9.11 Inductive Kick. 9.12 Magnetically Coupled Coils and Mutual Inductance. 9.13 Parasitic Mutual Inductance. 9.14 Transformers. 9.15 Ideal Transformers. 9.16 Applications of Transformers. 9.17 Concluding Remarks. 9.18 Problems. 10 Complex Arithmetic and Algebra. 10.1 Complex Numbers. 10.2 Complex Arithmetic. 10.3 Conjugate of a Complex Number. 10.4 Magnitude of a Complex Number. 10.5 Arithmetic in a Complex Plane. 10.6 Polar Form of a Complex Number. 10.7 Eulers Identity and Polar Arithmetic. 10.8 The Symbols ae and ae!. 10.9 Problems. 11 Transient Analysis. 11.1 Unit Step Function. 11.2 Notation. 11.3 Initial Conditions. 11.4 First-Order Circuits. 11.5 Second-Order Circuits. 11.6 Time Invariance, Superposition, and Pulse Response. 11.7 Operator Notation. 11.8 Problems. 12 Sinusoids, Phasors, and Impedance. 12.1 Sinusoidal Voltages and Currents. 12.2 Time Origin, Phase Reference, and Initial Phase. 12.3 Phasors. 12.4 Phasor Diagrams. 12.5 Impedance and Generalized Ohm's Law. 12.6 Admittance. 12.7 Impedance and Admittance Ratios in dB. 12.8 A Fundamental Relation. 12.9 Circuit Reduction: Elements in Series and Parallel. 12.10 Time Domain and Frequency Domain. 12.11 Sinusoidal and DC Steady State. 12.12 Frequency-Domain Circuit Analysis. 12.13 Reactance and Effective Resistance. 12.14 Susceptance and Effective Conductance. 12.15 Impedance and Admittance Triangles. 12.16 Linearity and Superposition. 12.17 The'venin and Norton Equivalent Circuits: Source Transformations. 12.18 Checking Your Work. 12.19 Resonance. 12.20 Quality Factors and Common Resonant Coni-- gurations. 12.21 Simulating Inductance Using Active RC Circuits. 12.22 Circuit Elements and Physical Circuit Components. 12.23 Problems. 13 Complex Power. 13.1 Dei-- nition of Complex Power. 13.2 Notation. 13.3 Power Calculations. 13.4 Reactive Power and Apparent Power. 13.5 Conservation of Complex Power. 13.6 Power Relations in Resonant Circuits. 13.7 Power Factor. 13.8 Power Triangle and Power-Factor Correction. 13.9 Superposition of Complex Power. 13.10 Power Transfer. 13.11 Impedance Matching. 13.12 Problems. 14 Three-Phase Circuits. 14.1 Three-Phase Sources. 14.2 Power Transmission and Distribution. 14.3 Residential Wiring. 14.4 Three-Phase Loads. 14.5 Balanced Y-I" and I"-Y Transformations. 14.6 Power Calculations for Balanced Three-Phase Loads. 14.7 Power-Factor Correction for Three-Phase Loads. 14.8 Instantaneous Power Delivered to a Balanced Load. 14.9 Problems. 15 Transfer Functions and Frequency-Domain Analysis. 15.1 Transfer Functions. 15.2 Dependence of a Transfer Function upon Source and Load. 15.3 Gain and Phase Shift. 15.4 Gain in Decibels (dB). 15.5 Standard Form of a Transfer Function. 15.6 Asymptotic Gain Plots: Linear Factors. 15.7 Asymptotic Gain Plots: Quadratic Factors. 15.8 Asymptotic Plots of Phase Shift Versus Frequency. 15.9 Filters and Bandwidth. 15.10 Frequency Response. 15.11 Problems. 16 Fourier Series. 16.1 Amplitude-Phase Series. 16.2 Exponential Series and Fourier Coefi-- cients. 16.3 Quadrature Series. 16.4 Summary: Three Forms of Fourier Series. 16.5 Integral Formula for Fourier Coefi-- cients. 16.6 A Table of Fourier Coefi-- cients. 16.7 Modii-- ed Fourier Coefi-- cients for Composite Waveforms. 16.8 Convergence of Fourier Series. 16.9 Gibbs' Phenomenon. 16.10 Circuit Response to Periodic Excitation. 16.11 Spectra and Spectral Analysis. 16.12 Problems. 17 Operational Amplii-- ers II: AC Model and Applications. 17.1 AC Model for an Op Amp. 17.2 Linear Resistive-Feedback Amplii-- ers. 17.3 Linear Reactive-Feedback Circuits. 17.4 Output Swing. 17.5 Slew Rate. 17.6 Amplii-- ers in Cascade. 17.7 Capacitance Coupling. 17.8 Input Bias Current Compensation in Capacitance-Coupled Amplii-- ers. 17.9 Power Dissipation in Op Amps and Op-Amp Circuits. 17.10 Power-Conversion Efi-- ciency. 17.11 Op-Amp Amplii-- er Circuit Design. 17.12 Problems. 18 Laplace Transformation and s-Domain Circuit Analysis. 18.1 Dei-- nition of the Laplace Transformation. 18.2 Convergence and Uniqueness. 18.3 One-Sided Laplace Transforms. 18.4 Shorthand Notation. 18.5 The Delta Function (Unit Impulse). 18.6 Tables of Operational Properties and Transform Pairs. 18.7 Inverse Transforms Using Partial-Fraction Expansions. 18.8 Terminal Characteristics and Equivalent Circuits. 18.9 Circuit Analysis in the s Domain. 18.10 Checking Your Work. 18.11 s-Domain Transfer Functions. 18.12 Forced Response and Unforced Response. 18.13 Impulse Response and Step Response. 18.14 Relation of s-Domain to Frequency-Domain Transfer Functions. 18.15 s-Domain Models for Op Amps and Basic Op-Amp Circuits. 18.16 Circuits in Cascade. 18.17 Poles, Zeros, and Pole-Zero Plots. 18.18 Stability. 18.19 Pole-Zero Cancellation. 18.20 Dominant Poles. 18.21 Pole-Zero Plots and Bode Plots. 18.22 Problems. 19 Active Filters. 19.1 Gain. 19.2 Group Delay. 19.3 A Simple Two-Pole Active Filter. 19.4 Sallen-Key (VCVS) Filters. 19.5 State-Variable Biquadratic Filter. 19.6 Modern Filter Design. 19.7 Problems. Appendix: Answers to Exercises
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Electronic circuits
9 (RLIN) 206
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Electronic circuits design
9 (RLIN) 207
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