Equivalent circuit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An equivalent circuit refers to the simplest form of a passive circuit that retains all of the electrical characteristics of the original (and more complex) circuit.

Any circuit consisting of passive components can be reduced to a basic equivalent circuit containing a power source and a single impedance representing total impedance. This process is called reduction to an equivalent circuit.

There are two types of equivalent circuits:

This is also done to describe and model the electrical properties of materials or biological systems like the cell membrane. The latter is modelled as a capacitor (i.e. the lipid bilayer) in parallel with resistance-battery combinations (i.e. ion channels powered by an ion gradient across the membrane).


In other languages