Definition and Overview

Resonance Concept

Resonance: condition in AC circuits where inductive reactance equals capacitive reactance (XL = XC). Result: net reactance zero, impedance purely resistive.

Physical Interpretation

Energy oscillates between magnetic field in inductor and electric field in capacitor with minimal loss. Circuit oscillates at natural frequency.

Significance

Allows maximum current/voltage at resonant frequency, frequency selectivity. Basis for filters, oscillators, impedance matching.

"Resonance is the amplification of response in a system at a particular frequency where energy exchange is most efficient." -- David J. Griffiths

Types of Resonance

Series Resonance

Occurs in series RLC circuit: resistor (R), inductor (L), capacitor (C) connected sequentially. Minimum impedance at resonance.

Parallel Resonance

Occurs in parallel RLC circuit: components connected in parallel. Maximum impedance at resonance.

Other Resonance Forms

Mechanical, acoustic, nuclear resonance; focus here is electrical resonance in AC circuits.

Resonant Frequency

Formula

Determined by inductance and capacitance values:

f0 = 1 / (2π√(LC))

Frequency Dependence

Resonance frequency independent of resistance; changes with L or C variations.

Angular Frequency

Angular resonant frequency ω0 = 2πf0 = 1 / √(LC)

Series Resonance Circuit

Circuit Description

Components R, L, C connected in series with AC source.

Impedance at Resonance

Impedance Z minimized, equals R only: XL = XC, Z = R.

Current Behavior

Current amplitude maximized at resonance, limited by R only.

Voltage Across Components

Voltages across L and C can exceed source voltage due to energy exchange.

Parallel Resonance Circuit

Circuit Description

R, L, C connected in parallel to AC source.

Impedance at Resonance

Impedance Z maximized; circuit behaves as open circuit at resonance.

Current Characteristics

Input current minimized; circulating current between L and C components.

Voltage Behavior

Voltage across parallel branches equal to source voltage.

Impedance Characteristics

General Expression

Impedance Z = R + j(XL - XC) where XL = ωL, XC = 1/ωC.

At Resonance

XL = XC, imaginary parts cancel, Z purely resistive.

Frequency Variation

Below resonance: circuit capacitive (XC > XL), above resonance: inductive (XL > XC).

Graphical Representation

Impedance vs frequency curve shows minimum (series) or maximum (parallel) at resonance.

Frequency RangeImpedance BehaviorCircuit Type
Below ResonanceCapacitive Reactance DominatesSeries and Parallel
At ResonanceImpedance Minimum (Series), Maximum (Parallel)Series and Parallel
Above ResonanceInductive Reactance DominatesSeries and Parallel

Quality Factor (Q)

Definition

Q = ratio of reactive power to resistive power; measure of sharpness of resonance peak.

Series Circuit Q

Q = (1/R)√(L/C) = ω0L/R = 1/(ω0CR)

Parallel Circuit Q

Q = R√(C/L) = R/(ω0L) = ω0CR

Interpretation

Higher Q: narrower bandwidth, higher selectivity, lower energy loss.

Typical Values

Q ranges from few units (low selectivity) to thousands (high selectivity in radio frequency circuits).

Bandwidth and Selectivity

Bandwidth (Δf)

Frequency range where power ≥ half maximum; Δf = f2 - f1, f1 and f2 are half-power frequencies.

Relation to Q

Q = f0 / Δf

Selectivity

Narrow bandwidth means high selectivity; important in filtering and tuning applications.

Effect of Resistance

Increased R increases bandwidth, decreases Q, reduces selectivity.

Phase Angle Behavior

Definition

Phase angle θ between voltage and current defined by tan θ = (XL - XC)/R.

At Resonance

θ = 0°, current and voltage in phase.

Below Resonance

θ negative, circuit capacitive, current leads voltage.

Above Resonance

θ positive, circuit inductive, current lags voltage.

Energy Storage and Exchange

Energy in Inductor

Stored magnetic energy WL = ½ L I2, varies with current.

Energy in Capacitor

Stored electric energy WC = ½ C V2, varies with voltage.

Energy Exchange

At resonance, energy oscillates between L and C with minimal loss; sustains oscillations.

Role of Resistance

Resistance dissipates energy, reduces amplitude, broadens resonance peak.

Applications of Resonance

Radio Tuning

Resonance selects desired frequency signals by tuning L and C.

Filters

Bandpass and notch filters based on resonance frequency for signal processing.

Oscillators

Resonant circuits provide frequency stabilization in oscillators.

Impedance Matching

Resonance used to minimize reflections and maximize power transfer.

Medical Applications

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exploits nuclear resonance principles.

Mathematical Analysis

Series RLC Circuit Impedance

Z = R + j(ωL - 1/ωC)

Resonant Frequency Condition

ω0L = 1 / (ω0C)

Quality Factor Formula

Q = ω0L / R = 1 / (ω0CR)

Bandwidth Relation

Δω = ω2 - ω1 = ω0 / Q

Power Factor

PF = cos θ = R / |Z|, unity at resonance.

ParameterExpressionDescription
Resonant Frequencyf0 = 1/(2π√LC)Frequency of reactance cancellation
Quality Factor (Series)Q = (1/R)√(L/C)Sharpness of resonance
BandwidthΔf = f0/QFrequency range of resonance
Impedance at ResonanceZ = RPurely resistive

References

  • Hayt, W. H., & Kemmerly, J. E. "Engineering Circuit Analysis," McGraw-Hill, 8th Edition, 2012, pp. 500-540.
  • Nilsson, J. W., & Riedel, S. A. "Electric Circuits," Pearson, 10th Edition, 2014, pp. 320-360.
  • Alexander, C. K., & Sadiku, M. N. O. "Fundamentals of Electric Circuits," McGraw-Hill, 6th Edition, 2016, pp. 410-450.
  • Griffiths, D. J. "Introduction to Electrodynamics," Pearson, 4th Edition, 2013, pp. 250-270.
  • Franco, S. "Design with Operational Amplifiers and Analog Integrated Circuits," McGraw-Hill, 3rd Edition, 2002, pp. 120-145.