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Find the Zero-Input and Zero-State Responses of a Series RC Circuit

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2016-03-26 14:55:34
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To find the total response of an RC series circuit, you need to find the zero-input response and the zero-state response and then add them together. A first-order RC series circuit has one resistor (or network of resistors) and one capacitor connected in series.

Here is an RC series circuit broken up into two circuits. The top-right diagram shows the zero-input response, which you get by setting the input to 0. The bottom-right diagram shows the zero-state response, which you get by setting the initial conditions to 0.

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You first want to find the zero-input response for the RC series circuit. The top-right diagram here shows the input signal vT(t) equal to 0. Zero-input voltage means you have zero . . . nada . . . zip . . . input for all time. The output response is due to the initial condition V0 (initial capacitor voltage) at time t = 0. The first-order differential equation reduces to

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Here, vZI(t) is the capacitor voltage. For an input source set to 0 volts as shown here, the capacitor voltage is called a zero-input response or free response. No external forces (such as a battery) are acting on the circuit, except for the initial state of the capacitor voltage.

You can reasonably guess that the solution is the exponential function (you can check and verify the solution afterward). You try an exponential because the time derivative of an exponential is also an exponential. Substitute that guess into the RC first-order circuit equation:

vZI(t) =Aekt

The A and k are arbitrary constants of the zero-input response. Now substitute the solution vZI(t) = Aekt into the differential equation:

image2.jpg

You get an algebraic characteristic equation after setting the equation equal to 0 and factoring out Aekt:

Aekt(1 + RCk) = 0

The characteristic equation gives you a much simpler problem. The coefficient of ekt has to be 0, so you just solve for the constant k:

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When you have k, you have the zero-input response vZI(t). Using k = –1/RC, you can find the solution to the differential equation for the zero input:

image4.jpg

Now you can find the constant A by applying the initial condition. At time t = 0, the initial voltage is V0, which gives you

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The constant A is simply the initial voltage V0 across the capacitor.

Finally, you have the solution to the capacitor voltage, which is the zero-input response vZI(t):

image6.jpg

The constant term RC in this equation is called the time constant. The time constant provides a measure of how long a capacitor has discharged or charged. In this example, the capacitor starts at some initial state of voltage V0 and dissipates quietly into oblivion to another state of 0 volts.

Suppose RC = 1 second and initial voltage V0 = 5 volts. This sample circuit plots the decaying exponential, showing that it takes about 5 time constants, or 5 seconds, for the capacitor voltage to decay to 0.

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Finding the zero-state response by focusing on the input source

Zero-state response means zero initial conditions, and it requires finding the capacitor voltage when there’s an input source, vT(t). You need to find the homogeneous and particular solutions to get the zero-state response. To find zero initial conditions, you look at the circuit when there’s no voltage across the capacitor at time t = 0.

The circuit at the bottom right of this sample circuit has zero initial conditions and an input voltage of VT(t) = u(t), where u(t) is a unit step input.

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Mathematically, you can describe step function u(t) as

image9.jpg

The input signal is divided into two time intervals. When t u(t) = 0. The first-order differential equation becomes

image10.jpg

You’ve already found the solution before time t = 0, because vh(t) is the solution to the homogeneous equation:

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You determine the arbitrary constant c1 after finding the particular solution and applying the initial condition V0 of 0 volts.

Now find the particular solution vp(t) when u(t) = 1 after t = 0.

After time t = 0, a unit step input describes the transient voltage behavior across the capacitor. The capacitor voltage reacting to a step input is called the step response.

For a step input vT(t) = u(t), you have a first-order differential equation:

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You already know that the value of the step u(t) is equal to 1 after t = 0. Substitute u(t) = 1 into the preceding equation:

image13.jpg

Solve for the capacitor voltage vp(t), which is the particular solution. The particular solution always depends on the actual input signal.

Because the input is a constant after t = 0, the particular solution vp(t) is assumed to be a constant VA as well.

The derivative of a constant is 0, which implies the following:

image14.jpg

Now substitute vp(t) = VA and its derivative into the first-order differential equation:

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After a relatively long period of time, the particular solution follows the unit step input with strength VA = 1. In general, a step input with strength VA or VAu(t) leads to a capacitor voltage of VA.

After finding the homogeneous and particular solutions, you add up the two solutions to get the zero-state response vZS(t). You find c1 by applying the initial condition that’s equal to 0.

Adding up the homogeneous solution and the particular solution, you have vZS(t):

vZS(t) = vh(t) + vp(t)

Substituting in the homogeneous and particular solutions gives you

image16.jpg

At t = 0, the initial condition is vc(0) = 0 for the zero-state response. You now calculate vZS(0) as

image17.jpg

Next, solve for c1:

c1= -VA

Substitute c1 into the zero-state equation to produce the complete solution of the zero-state response vZS(t):

image18.jpg

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

John M. Santiago Jr., PhD, served in the United States Air Force (USAF) for 26 years. During that time, he held a variety of leadership positions in technical program management, acquisition development, and operation research support. While assigned in Europe, he spearheaded more than 40 international scientific and engineering conferences/workshops.