I have a beginners question about resonance of LC circuits:
I know that resonance frequency of just one capacitor and one inductor is sqrt(1/LC). But what if we have a network of n capacitors and m inductors? And they are all mixed connected in parallel and series. What about then?
Somewhere I have read that if we have a mixed way RLC circuit or just LC circuit we find an impedance of the whole circuit and then take just imaginary part and equate with 0. Then we solve for w (omega). But this is just an approximation.
Can someone tell more about this, and explain it? Thank you.
Hi,
As others have pointed out, as you get into more components the analysis becomes more complicated and because of the way multiple parts work together the interpretation of 'resonance' becomes more application specific. In fact, even a simple RLC circuit can have up to three points that are deemed the 'resonant' points although the one that is usually studied the most is the physical resonant point.
Add to that the many components may have several points that are locally a peak or dip, and so we find that we may have several points we might call 'resonant'. Depending on the application some or all may matter, or only one. In control theory for example often the lowest resonant point is the dominant so we may pay a lot of attention to that one while ignoring the rest.
The best bet here is to follow along the footsteps of everyone else that came though your path already, and that is to first study in detail the series RLC circuit and the parallel RLC circuit. That will get you pretty far. Once you get comfortable with that you may want to move on to a dual RLC circuit and see what happens.
if you know circuit analysis you can check out each circuit and try to find out the important points of each. In particular, AC circuit analysis, which is pretty simple if you know how to analyze DC circuits with voltage sources and resistors. A technique like Nodal Analysis is very general so you should try to learn that and then you can go a lot farther. Of course you can always try a simulator like the free LT Spice simulator and look for peaks and dips in the frequency response.
Good luck to you.