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RLC circuits are one of the most important and scoring topics in Class 12 Physics. If you understand the formulas and know how to apply them step by step, numericals become very easy to solve.
In this blog, we’ll break down everything you need:
An RLC circuit consists of:
Simple Understanding:
| Component | Function | Real-Life Analogy |
|---|---|---|
| Resistor (R) | Opposes current | Like friction in motion |
| Inductor (L) | Stores energy in magnetic field | Like a flywheel storing energy |
| Capacitor (C) | Stores energy in electric field | Like a water tank storing water |
(A) Series RLC Circuit – All components connected in a single path.
(B) Parallel RLC Circuit – Components connected across the same voltage source.
Note: For board exams, series RLC is most important.
Impedance (Z)
Z = √(R² + (XL − XC)²)
Current in AC Circuit
I = V / Z
Resonance Condition
XL = XC
Resonant Frequency
f₀ = 1 / (2π√LC)
| Concept | Formula | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Inductive Reactance | XL = ωL | Inductor present |
| Capacitive Reactance | XC = 1 / (ωC) | Capacitor present |
| Impedance | Z = √(R² + (XL − XC)²) | AC circuits |
| Current | I = V / Z | Find current |
| Resonance | XL = XC | Max current |
Numerical 1
Given: R = 10Ω, L = 0.1H, C = 100μF, f = 50Hz, V = 220V
Step 1: ω = 2πf = 314 rad/s
Step 2: XL = 31.4Ω, XC ≈ 31.8Ω
Step 3: Z ≈ 10Ω
Step 4: I = 220 / 10 = 22A
Answer: Impedance ≈ 10Ω, Current = 22A
Numerical 2
Given: L = 0.2H, C = 50μF
f₀ ≈ 50Hz
Given: R = 20Ω, I = 2A
V = IR = 40V
| Concept | Example | Understanding |
|---|---|---|
| Resistance | Rough road | Slows motion |
| Inductance | Heavy wheel | Resists change |
| Capacitance | Water tank | Stores energy |
| Resonance | Swing | Maximum motion |
Mixing XL and XC
Remember: L → Multiply, C → Divide
Ignoring Units
1 μF = 10⁻⁶ F
Skipping Impedance
Always calculate Z first
| Mistake | Correct Approach |
|---|---|
| Using R instead of Z | Use impedance |
| Forgetting ω | Calculate 2πf |
| Wrong units | Convert properly |
| Ignoring sign | Use XL − XC |
R = 5Ω, L = 0.2H, C = 200μF, f = 50Hz, V = 100V
| Area | Reason |
|---|---|
| Formula errors | Weak concepts |
| Calculation mistakes | No steps |
| Unit conversion | Carelessness |
| Skipping steps | Overconfidence |
RLC circuits are pattern-based. Master the steps, and you can solve any board-level numerical easily.
Q1. What is the formula for impedance in an RLC circuit?
A. Impedance is given by Z = √(R² + (Xₗ − Xc)²), where Xₗ is inductive reactance and Xc is capacitive reactance.
Q2. How do you solve RLC circuit numericals easily?
A. Follow steps: write given values, calculate ω, find Xₗ and Xc, compute impedance, then apply I = V/Z.
Q3. What happens at resonance in an RLC circuit?
A. At resonance, Xₗ = Xc, impedance is minimum, and current becomes maximum.
If you want to practice this topic, you can take a quiz in Curious Corner for better practice.
*Note: You must register yourself to access the quizzes.*
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