Dizem-nos que o calor aumenta a resistência de um resistor (ou diminui sua condutância) e a corrente diminui quando a resistência é aumentada.
Assim, com menos corrente, menos calor seria dissipado, o que diminui a resistência e faz com que mais corrente flua, e novamente, mais corrente, mais calor ... Parece um ciclo interminável.
Essa flutuação ocorre em circuitos reais? Para em algum momento?
(Estou me referindo a circuitos DC, pois isso provavelmente seria muito mais complicado em circuitos CA)
current
resistors
resistance
heat
sonslikefiziks
fonte
fonte
Respostas:
Eu acredito que é possível construir um modelo físico simples com as idéias que você forneceu.
Em um circuito CC simples, sob uma tensão constante V e resistência ôhmica R, é possível usar a equação de potência:
Se supusermos que o sistema é constituído por um fio com comprimento constante L e área de seção transversal A, a resistência R pode ser:
Para pequenas oscilações T de temperatura, a resistividade pode ser aproximada para:
E como existe apenas aquecimento de material sólido, a energia recebida pelo fio é: Finalmente, todo esse conjunto se torna: mcΔ ˙ T =V2A
In this model, we see a transient solution followed by a constant one. But remember this is valid just for small temperature fluctuations.
fonte
This could be analyzed in the same way as a control circuit with feedback. From a practical sense, the heating will be much slower than the other effects, so that will dominate the loop equations. As such, it will exponentially approach equilibrium, unless there's other elements of the system that limit its response (ridiculously enormous inductors, state machines introducing delays, etc).
fonte
This is something like a PTC thermistor. which will reach an equilibrium temperature.
To get oscillation you'd have to have a phase shift or delay of some kind. You could probably make an oscillator with a mass transport delay having a a heater heat water flowing in a tube which warms a thermistor downstream and increases the heat to the upstream heater.
fonte
I don't think this is exactly what you were asking for, but just in case, turn signal flashers depend on this behavior.
From the 1933 Patent:
A thermostatic switch closes and opens the secondary circuit. When current flows a metal strip in the switch heats up, expands and eventually opens the circuit. When it cools down it shrinks and closes again.
Some modern ones (especially when low-current LED bulbs are used) are digital/solid state, but lots of cars still use the same exact principle.
fonte
That depends on heat capacity of the element. Lower the heat capacity, more like a resistive feedbacked opamp circuit where the temperature will converge. Heat capacity acts like reactive elements and will cause oscillations. Element's heat conductivity (heat transfer speed to outside) will determine if it is going to be damped or diverged.
fonte
For the record, I loved Pedro Henrique Vaz Valois' answer and upvoted it.
Said simply: Yes there are transients.
You can think of this in the same way you would an RLC step-function circuit. Apply blow dryer, throw the switch, see transients on oscilloscope, watch flat line appear as all the energy balances out to a steady state. Turn the switch into an oscillating voltage and watch the resistance swing back and forth for as long as the oscillating voltage exists.
And it's a very real problem
One of many reasons why big honking cooling systems are attached to CPUs and other high-density/high-frequency chips is that we don't (we desperately don't) want to deal with heating effects. Resistor manufacturers go to great lengths to minimize the resistance variability in their products.
It's worth your time to read "Non-Linearity of Resistance/Temperature Characteristic: Its Influence on Performance of Precision Resistors" published earlier this year from Dr. Felix Zandman and Joseph Szwarc of Vishay Foil Resistors.
fonte
Depends on what the resistor is made of. Most of them have a positive temperature coefficient but it is quite possible to make one with a negative temperature coefficient.
In general no, normally they just gradually tend towards a steady state temperature.
fonte
No. The temperature approaches an equilibrium, but does not overshoot it such that it must then change directions and come back.
Consider a resistor that's initially at room temperature with no current.
Then, it's connected to a constant voltage. Immediately the current increases to some value determined by Ohm's law:
The resistor converts electrical energy into thermal energy through Joule heating:
It also loses heat to its environment at a rate proportional to its temperature. The size, geometry, airflow and so on can be combined and characterized as a thermal resistanceRθ in units kelvin per watt. If ΔT is the temperature of the resistor above the ambient temperature, the rate of thermal energy lost to the environment is given by:
As the resistor becomes warmer, it loses thermal energy to the environment faster due to an increasingΔT . When that rate of loss (equation 3) equals the rate of energy gain by joule heating (equation 2), the resistor has reached temperature equilibrium.
Equation 2 decreases with increasing temperature, assuming a typical positive temperature coefficient. Equation 3 increases with increasing temperature. At some point the resistor has warmed sufficiently that they are equal. There is no mechanism by which the resistor would "overshoot" this equilibrium, thus requiring that the resistor go from warming up to cooling off. Once equations 2 and 3 are equal, the temperature, resistance, and current have reached equilibrium and there's no reason for them to change further.
fonte
In a simple model, the current is a direct function of the resistance and the resistance is a direct function of the temperature. But the temperature is not a direct function of the current: the current governs the amount of heat that is produced, which influences the variation of the temperature over time.
In the linear regime, this corresponds to a first order equation
As the coefficient is negative (an increase of the temperature causes an increase of the current, a decrease of the amount of heat and finally a decrease of the temperature), the system is stable and will converge to a steady state.
And in any case, a first order system does not have a oscillatory mode.
For such a behavior to be possible, a source of instability is needed, such as a negative thermal coefficient, as well as a second differentiator.
fonte
Different materials have different conduction properties, including their thermal profiles. That is, some materials will heat up much more than others given the same current flow. This is one reason why components such as resistors have a tolerance.
The temperature fluctuations you describe don't really happen in real circuits. Instead, the resistor would heat up as current begins to flow but would reach an equilibrium point where the amount of heat generation from the current matches the amount of heat radiated into the surrounding air. Then the temperature of the resistor remains stable, the actual resistance remains stable, and the current remains stable.
fonte
Actually there was a neat application for this in the olden days. The blinkers on a car were operated by a bimetallic thermal switch. When the blinker light is on the bimetallic heats up and flexes opening the circuit. Then the heat dissipates, the switch cools and closes again.
Not sure if all cars still use the bimetallic switch, but I'd guess that some now use computer control.
fonte