LC Circuits

LC Circuit Fundamentals

An LC circuit consists of an inductor (L) and a capacitor (C) connected together. These circuits form the foundation of resonant systems and are central to understanding how the VIC operates.

Components of an LC Circuit

The Inductor (L)

An inductor stores energy in its magnetic field when current flows through it. Key properties:

The Capacitor (C)

A capacitor stores energy in its electric field between two conductive plates. Key properties:

Series LC Circuit

Circuit Configuration: L and C connected in series with the source

Total Impedance:

Z = √(R² + (XL - XC)²)

At Resonance (XL = XC):

  • Z = R (minimum impedance)
  • Current = V/R (maximum current)
  • Voltage across L = Voltage across C = Q × Vsource

Series LC Behavior

Frequency Condition Circuit Behavior
f < f₀ XC > XL Capacitive (current leads voltage)
f = f₀ XC = XL Resistive (current in phase with voltage)
f > f₀ XL > XC Inductive (current lags voltage)

Parallel LC Circuit

Circuit Configuration: L and C connected in parallel

At Resonance:

  • Impedance approaches infinity (in ideal case)
  • Current from source is minimum
  • Large circulating current flows between L and C

Also called: Tank circuit, because it "tanks" or stores energy

Characteristic Impedance (Z₀)

The characteristic impedance is a fundamental property of any LC circuit:

Z₀ = √(L/C)

This value represents:

  • The impedance at resonance for a parallel LC circuit
  • The ratio of voltage to current in a traveling wave
  • A design parameter for matching circuits

Energy Transfer in LC Circuits

In an ideal LC circuit (no resistance), energy oscillates perpetually between the inductor and capacitor:

  1. Capacitor fully charged: All energy stored in electric field (E = ½CV²)
  2. Current building: Energy transferring to inductor
  3. Maximum current: All energy stored in magnetic field (E = ½LI²)
  4. Current decreasing: Energy transferring back to capacitor
  5. Cycle repeats at the resonant frequency

LC Circuits in the VIC

The VIC uses LC circuits in two critical locations:

Primary Side (L1-C1)

Secondary Side (L2-WFC)

Design Principle: The relationship between L and C values determines not only the resonant frequency but also the characteristic impedance, which affects how much voltage magnification is achievable.

Practical Considerations

Next: Quality Factor (Q) Explained →


Revision #1
Created 2026-01-01 20:34:34 UTC by Chris Bake
Updated 2026-01-01 20:35:32 UTC by Chris Bake