Source Conversion
Definition
Source conversion is the process of replacing a practical voltage source with an equivalent practical current source, or replacing a practical current source with an equivalent practical voltage source, without changing the external behavior of the circuit at the terminals.
A practical voltage source consists of an ideal voltage source in series with an internal resistance, while a practical current source consists of an ideal current source in parallel with an internal resistance. The equivalence is based on the fact that both forms produce the same terminal voltage-current relationship for the external load.
Main Content
1. Voltage Source to Current Source Conversion
- A practical voltage source in series with resistance can be converted into an equivalent current source in parallel with the same resistance .
- The equivalent current source value is given by: The direction of the current source is from the positive terminal of the voltage source toward the negative terminal, matching the assumed current flow through the resistor.
Example:
If a 12 V source is in series with a 6 resistor, it can be converted into a current source of:
in parallel with a 6 resistor.
This conversion is very useful when a current source form makes it easier to combine elements in parallel or apply nodal analysis.
2. Current Source to Voltage Source Conversion
- A practical current source in parallel with resistance can be converted into an equivalent voltage source in series with the same resistance .
- The equivalent voltage source value is: The polarity of the voltage source is determined by the direction of the current source and the voltage drop across the parallel resistor.
Example:
If a current source of 3 A is in parallel with an 8 resistor, the equivalent voltage source is:
in series with an 8 resistor.
This form is useful when the source needs to be expressed as a voltage source for mesh analysis or for simplifying series-connected components.
3. Conditions and Limitations of Source Conversion
- Source conversion is valid only for linear circuits containing independent sources and resistances; it is not directly applicable to non-linear components such as diodes or transistors without special consideration.
- The internal resistance must remain the same during conversion, and the source must be practical, meaning the source is accompanied by a resistance. Ideal sources alone cannot be source-converted directly because an ideal voltage source has zero internal resistance and an ideal current source has infinite internal resistance.
Important note:
Source conversion preserves the terminal behavior only for the external circuit. Internally, the source arrangement changes, but the output seen by the load remains equivalent.
Working / Process
- Identify whether the source is a practical voltage source or practical current source.
- Apply the conversion formula:
- Voltage source to current source:
- Current source to voltage source:
- Redraw the circuit with the equivalent source and keep the resistance in the corresponding parallel or series form, then simplify the circuit further if possible.
Advantages / Applications
- Simplifies complex circuits by changing sources into a more convenient form for analysis.
- Helps in applying nodal analysis and mesh analysis more efficiently.
- Useful in finding Thevenin and Norton equivalents and in solving networks with mixed source configurations.
Summary
- Source conversion is the replacement of a practical voltage source with an equivalent current source, or a practical current source with an equivalent voltage source.
- It is based on maintaining the same terminal behavior of the circuit.
- The formulas used are and .
- Important terms to remember