in the Ohm's law
image mnemonic gives the formula in terms of the remaining parameters. In
circuit analysis, three equivalent expressions of Ohm's law are used interchangeably: I = \frac{V}{R} \quad \text{or}\quad V = IR \quad \text{or} \quad R = \frac{V}{I}. Each equation is quoted by some sources as the defining relationship of Ohm's law, or all three are quoted, or derived from a proportional form, or even just the two that do not correspond to Ohm's original statement may sometimes be given. The interchangeability of the equation may be represented by a triangle, where
V (
voltage) is placed on the top section, the
I (
current) is placed to the left section, and the
R (
resistance) is placed to the right. The divider between the top and bottom sections indicates division (hence the division bar).
Resistive circuits Resistors are circuit elements that impede the passage of
electric charge in agreement with Ohm's law, and are designed to have a specific resistance value
R. In schematic diagrams, a resistor is shown as a long rectangle or zig-zag symbol. An element (resistor or conductor) that behaves according to Ohm's law over some operating range is referred to as an
ohmic device (or an
ohmic resistor) because Ohm's law and a single value for the resistance suffice to describe the behavior of the device over that range. Ohm's law holds for circuits containing only resistive elements (no capacitances or inductances) for all forms of driving voltage or current, regardless of whether the driving voltage or current is constant (
DC) or time-varying such as
AC. At any instant of time Ohm's law is valid for such circuits. Resistors which are in
series or in
parallel may be grouped together into a single "equivalent resistance" in order to apply Ohm's law in analyzing the circuit.
Reactive circuits with time-varying signals When reactive elements such as capacitors, inductors, or transmission lines are involved in a circuit to which AC or time-varying voltage or current is applied, the relationship between voltage and current becomes the solution to a
differential equation, so Ohm's law (as defined above) does not directly apply since that form contains only resistances having value
R, not complex impedances which may contain capacitance (
C) or inductance (
L). Equations for
time-invariant AC circuits take the same form as Ohm's law. However, the variables are generalized to
complex numbers and the current and voltage waveforms are
complex exponentials. In this approach, a voltage or current waveform takes the form
Ae, where
t is time,
s is a complex parameter, and
A is a complex scalar. In any
linear time-invariant system, all of the currents and voltages can be expressed with the same
s parameter as the input to the system, allowing the time-varying complex exponential term to be canceled out and the system described algebraically in terms of the complex scalars in the current and voltage waveforms. The complex generalization of resistance is
impedance, usually denoted
Z; it can be shown that for an inductor, Z = sL and for a capacitor, Z = \frac{1}{sC}. We can now write, V = Z\,I where
V and
I are the complex scalars in the voltage and current respectively and
Z is the complex impedance. This form of Ohm's law, with
Z taking the place of
R, generalizes the simpler form. When
Z is complex, only the real part is responsible for dissipating heat. In a general AC circuit,
Z varies strongly with the frequency parameter
s, and so also will the relationship between voltage and current. For the common case of a steady
sinusoid, the
s parameter is taken to be j\omega, corresponding to a complex sinusoid Ae^{\mbox{ } j \omega t}. The real parts of such complex current and voltage waveforms describe the actual sinusoidal currents and voltages in a circuit, which can be in different phases due to the different complex scalars.
Linear approximations Ohm's law is one of the basic equations used in the
analysis of electrical circuits. It applies to both metal conductors and circuit components (
resistors) specifically made for this behaviour. Both are ubiquitous in electrical engineering. Materials and components that obey Ohm's law are described as "ohmic" which means they produce the same value for resistance (
R =
V/
I) regardless of the value of
V or
I which is applied and whether the applied voltage or current is DC (
direct current) of either positive or negative polarity or AC (
alternating current). In a true ohmic device, the same value of resistance will be calculated from
R =
V/
I regardless of the value of the applied voltage
V. That is, the ratio of
V/
I is constant, and when current is plotted as a function of voltage the curve is
linear (a straight line). If voltage is forced to some value
V, then that voltage
V divided by measured current
I will equal
R. Or if the current is forced to some value
I, then the measured voltage
V divided by that current
I is also
R. Since the plot of
I versus
V is a straight line, then it is also true that for any set of two different voltages
V1 and
V2 applied across a given device of resistance
R, producing currents
I1 =
V1/
R and
I2 =
V2/
R, that the ratio (
V1 −
V2)/(
I1 −
I2) is also a constant equal to
R. The operator "delta" (Δ) is used to represent a difference in a quantity, so we can write Δ
V =
V1 −
V2 and Δ
I =
I1 −
I2. Summarizing, for any truly ohmic device having resistance
R,
V/
I = Δ
V/Δ
I =
R for any applied voltage or current or for the difference between any set of applied voltages or currents. s of four devices: Two
resistors, a
diode, and a
battery. The two resistors follow Ohm's law: The plot is a straight line through the origin. The other two devices do
not follow Ohm's law. There are, however, components of electrical circuits which do not obey Ohm's law; that is, their relationship between current and voltage (their
I–V curve) is
nonlinear (or non-ohmic). An example is the
p–n junction diode (curve at right). As seen in the figure, the current does not increase linearly with applied voltage for a diode. One can determine a value of current (
I) for a given value of applied voltage (
V) from the curve, but not from Ohm's law, since the value of "resistance" is not constant as a function of applied voltage. Further, the current only increases significantly if the applied voltage is positive, not negative. The ratio
V/
I for some point along the nonlinear curve is sometimes called the
static, or
chordal, or
DC, resistance, but as seen in the figure the value of total over total varies depending on the particular point along the nonlinear curve which is chosen. This means the "DC resistance" V/I at some point on the curve is not the same as what would be determined by applying an AC signal having peak amplitude volts or amps centered at that same point along the curve and measuring . However, in some diode applications, the AC signal applied to the device is small and it is possible to analyze the circuit in terms of the
dynamic,
small-signal, or
incremental resistance, defined as the one over the slope of the
V–
I curve at the average value (DC operating point) of the voltage (that is, one over the
derivative of current with respect to voltage). For sufficiently small signals, the dynamic resistance allows the Ohm's law small signal resistance to be calculated as approximately one over the slope of a line drawn tangentially to the
V–
I curve at the DC operating point. ==Temperature effects==