By passivity An active network contains at least one
voltage source or
current source that can supply energy to the network indefinitely. A
passive network does not contain an active source. An active network contains one or more sources of
electromotive force. Practical examples of such sources include a
battery or a
generator. Active elements can inject power to the circuit, provide power gain, and control the current flow within the circuit. Passive networks do not contain any sources of electromotive force. They consist of passive elements like resistors and capacitors.
By linearity Linear electrical networks, a special type consisting only of sources (voltage or current), linear lumped elements (resistors, capacitors, inductors), and linear distributed elements (transmission lines), have the property that signals are
linearly superimposable. They are thus more easily analyzed, using powerful
frequency domain methods such as
Laplace transforms, to determine
DC response,
AC response, and
transient response. Passive networks are generally taken to be linear, but there are exceptions. For instance, an
inductor with an iron core can be driven into
saturation if driven with a large enough current. In this region, the behaviour of the inductor is very non-linear.
By lumpiness Discrete
passive components (resistors, capacitors and inductors) are called
lumped elements because all of their, respectively, resistance, capacitance and inductance is assumed to be located ("lumped") at one place. This design philosophy is called the
lumped-element model and networks so designed are called
lumped-element circuits. This is the conventional approach to circuit design. At high enough frequencies, or for long enough circuits (such as
power transmission lines), the lumped assumption no longer holds because there is a significant fraction of a
wavelength across the component dimensions. A new design model, called the
distributed-element model, is needed for such cases. Networks designed to this model are called
distributed-element circuits. A distributed-element circuit that includes some lumped components is called a
semi-lumped design. An example of a semi-lumped circuit is the
combline filter. ==Classification of sources==