420-2016 – Circuit Theory I (TOI)

Gurantor departmentDepartment of Electrical Engineering
Subject guarantorIng. Stanislav Zajaczek, Ph.D.
Study levelundergraduate or graduate
Subject version
Version codeYear of introductionYear of cancellationCredits
420-2016/01 2010/2011 2013/2014 6
420-2016/02 2014/2015 2021/2022 8
420-2016/03 2015/2016 2020/2021 8
420-2016/04 2018/2019 2022/2023 6
420-2016/05 2018/2019 2022/2023 6

Subject aims expressed by acquired skills and competences

The aim of education is give creative lessons in physical laws and principles to analysis of three-phase circuit, transient phenomena, two-port network, frequency response and distributed lines. After education student is able to calculated current, voltage, power and energy in circuit anyplace and then on the basis of them look on properties of electrical device. Student practices obtained knowledge and acquirements energetically.

Teaching methods

Lectures
Individual consultations
Tutorials
Experimental work in labs
Project work

Summary

The course "Circuit theory I" deals with the analysis of the electrical circuits - the most typical structure in the electrical engineering. Electrical circuits knowledge are basic knowledge and they are a prerequisite for advanced circuit courses (electronic, measuring and control systems, electrical machines, etc.). The basic aim is to determine voltages and currents in the electrical circuit, and then identify (from these knowledge) the properties of the circuit or system. Theses: elementary models of electromagnetic effects, circuit analysis algorithms, transients in the linear circuits (the 1. order), experimental measurements (Associate professor Josef Punčochář).

Compulsory literature:

Mikulec, M.: Basic Circuit Theory I.,ČVUT 1995 Mikulec, M., Havlíček, V.: Basic Circuit Theory II.ČVUT 1996

Recommended literature:

Havlíček, V.-Čmejla, R.: Basic Circuit Theory I. (Exercises ), ČVUT 1996 Huelsman, P.L.: Basic Circuit Theory. Prentice-Hall International, 1991, ISBN 0-13-063157-4

Prerequisities

Subject has no prerequisities.

Co-requisities

Subject has no co-requisities.