An electric circuit is a closed loop (or network of loops) through which electric current can flow, built from interconnected components: passive (resistors, capacitors, inductors) and active (sources, transistors, integrated circuits). The circuit’s behavior — its currents and voltages — is determined by the components’ properties and the topology.
Components
A component is the basic building block of a circuit. Each has well-defined electrical properties:
- Two terminals (most components — resistors, capacitors, inductors, diodes) or three or more (transistors, op-amps, ICs).
- A constitutive equation relating its current to its voltage.
The five core passive elements:
Resistor
- Symbol: rectangular box (US convention) or zigzag (older convention).
- Constitutive equation: (Ohm’s law).
- Stores: nothing — dissipates energy as heat.
- Units: ohms ().
Capacitor
- Symbol: two parallel plates.
- Constitutive equation: , equivalent to .
- Stores: energy in an electric field between plates.
- Units: farads (F), typically µF or pF in practice.
Inductor
- Symbol: coiled wire.
- Constitutive equation: .
- Stores: energy in a magnetic field around the coil.
- Units: henries (H), typically mH or µH.
Diode
- Symbol: triangle pointing to a line.
- Constitutive equation: nonlinear, approximated as “conducts when forward-biased above V, blocks when reverse-biased.”
- Use: rectification, voltage clamping.
Transistor
- Symbol: varies (BJT, NMOS, PMOS).
- Constitutive equation: nonlinear; depends on type.
- Use: amplification, switching. The building block of all digital and analog ICs.
Sources
Active components that supply energy:
- Independent voltage source: produces a fixed voltage regardless of load. Symbol: circle with and .
- Independent current source: produces a fixed current regardless of load. Symbol: circle with arrow.
- Dependent sources: voltage or current as a function of another circuit variable. Used in modeling transistors and op-amps.
DC sources produce constant values; AC sources produce sinusoids — see AC electric circuits.
Kirchhoff’s laws
The two fundamental laws governing all circuits, from the simplest battery-and-bulb to the most complex IC:
Kirchhoff’s current law (KCL)
The sum of currents entering any node equals the sum of currents leaving:
Equivalently, the net current at any node is zero. Conservation of charge.
Kirchhoff’s voltage law (KVL)
The sum of voltage drops around any closed loop equals zero:
Conservation of energy (going around any loop, you must return to the same potential).
Series and parallel
Two basic combinations:
Series
Components connected end-to-end, sharing the same current:
- Resistors:
- Capacitors:
- Inductors:
Parallel
Components connected to the same two nodes, sharing the same voltage:
- Resistors:
- Capacitors:
- Inductors:
Notice resistors and inductors combine the same way; capacitors are inverted (because their constitutive equations are inverted).
Analysis techniques
For circuits more complex than simple series/parallel:
- Mesh analysis: assign currents to each loop, apply KVL, solve linear system.
- Node analysis: assign voltages to each node, apply KCL, solve linear system.
- Superposition: for circuits with multiple sources, analyze the response to each source separately and sum.
- Thévenin / Norton equivalent: replace any sub-circuit with one source + one impedance.
For AC circuits, use these same techniques with Phasor representations and impedances — see AC electric circuits and Phasor relationships for circuit elements.
Application areas
Circuit analysis underpins:
- Power systems: transmitting and distributing electricity.
- Electronics: amplifiers, oscillators, filters.
- Communications: modems, transceivers.
- Computing: every digital chip is built from circuits.
- Sensors and instrumentation: from thermometers to LIDAR.
For AC-specific analysis (frequency domain, impedance), see AC electric circuits and Phasor.