Friday, 6 May 2022

Voltage Source and Current Source – Ideal vs. Practical

 

Voltage Source and Current Source – Ideal vs. Practical

Voltage source:

Ideal Voltage Source: 

A voltage source is a device which provides a constant voltage to load at any instance of time and is independent of the current drawn from it. This type of source is known as an ideal voltage source. It has zero internal resistance.

            The graph represents the change in voltage of the voltage source with respect to time. It is                 constant at any instance of time.

Practical Voltage Source:

Voltage sources that have some amount of internal resistance are known as a practical voltage source. Due to this internal resistance, voltage drop takes place. If the internal resistance is high, less voltage will be provided to load and if the internal resistance is less, the voltage source will be closer to an ideal voltage source.A practical voltage source is thus denoted by a resistance in series which represents the internal resistance of source.
 

Current source:

 Ideal Current Source:
A current source is a device which provides the constant current to load at any time and is independent of the voltage supplied to the circuit. This type of current is known as an ideal current source; practically ideal current source is also not available. It has infinite resistance. 

The graph represents the change in current of the current source with respect to time. It is constant at any instance of time.

Practical Current source

Practically current sources do not have infinite resistance across there but they have a finite internal resistance. So the current delivered by the practical current source is not constant and it is also dependent somewhat on the voltage across it.

A practical current source is represented as an ideal current source connected with resistance in parallel.

The graph represents the current of the current source with respect to time. It is not constant but it also keeps on decreasing as the time passes.


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