Learning Objectives for This Lesson
By end of lesson, you will be able to:
- Identify a parallel circuit and explain branch independence
- Calculate
using - Find branch currents and total current
- Apply KCL to verify results
- Explain why household circuits use parallel wiring
Series vs. Parallel — Cut One Wire
- Series: cut one wire → all stop
- Parallel: cut one branch → other branches continue
What Makes a Circuit "Parallel"
- Components share the same two nodes — multiple independent paths
- Each branch operates at the full source voltage
- Voltage
is the same across every branch: - Current divides among branches:
Parallel Rules vs. Series Comparison
| Property | Series | Parallel |
|---|---|---|
| Current | Same everywhere | Divides among branches |
| Voltage | Divides across components | Same across all branches |
Quick Check: Independent Branches in Parallel
Two light bulbs are connected in parallel to a 9 V battery.
If one bulb burns out (its branch opens):
- What happens to the other bulb?
- What is the voltage across the functioning bulb?
Equivalent Resistance Formula for Parallel Circuits
- For two resistors:
(product over sum shortcut) is always less than the smallest individual resistance- Adding more parallel branches →
decreases → more total current
Why Use the Reciprocal Resistance Formula?
Derivation from
Worked Example: Two Parallel Resistors
Given:
Product/sum shortcut:
Verify:
Worked Example: Three Parallel Resistors
Given:
Verify:
Quick Check: Verify R_eq Is Less
Use the product/sum shortcut.
Branch Currents:
- Each branch is connected across the same source voltage
- Branch current is determined independently by Ohm's Law
- Smaller
→ larger branch current (current divider pattern)
Kirchhoff's Current Law at Every Node
- KCL is a statement of charge conservation
- Charge cannot accumulate at a junction — what flows in must flow out
- Use KCL as a verification step after finding all branch currents
Worked Example: Full Parallel Analysis — Step 1
Circuit:
Step 1:
Worked Example: Steps 2–3 — Branch Currents
Step 2:
Step 3:
Worked Example: Step 4 — KCL Verification
Current divider pattern:
- Smallest
(20 Ω) → largest (0.6 A) - Largest
(60 Ω) → smallest (0.2 A)
Quick Check: Which Branch Carries More?
In a parallel circuit with two branches:
Which branch carries more current —
Predict first, then calculate.
Guided Practice: Find All Branch Currents
Circuit:
Given:
Find:
Practice: Full Parallel Circuit Analysis
Solve completely:
Find:
Use all four steps. Verify
Practice Answers with KCL Verification
R_eq:
I_total:
Branches:
KCL:
Household Circuits: Parallel in Action
Every outlet connects in parallel to the 120 V supply — same voltage at every branch.
Why Parallel — Two Essential Reasons
-
Independence: Each appliance gets full 120 V regardless of others
- Series wiring would divide the voltage — each device gets a fraction
-
Failure isolation: One failed device doesn't affect others
- Series wiring: one bad device breaks the entire house
Worked Example: Will the Breaker Trip?
Circuit: 120 V, 20 A breaker
| Appliance | Power | Current |
|---|---|---|
| Microwave | 1200 W | 10 A |
| Hair dryer | 1500 W | 12.5 A |
Total:
Key Takeaways: Parallel Circuit Essentials
✓ Parallel: multiple paths, same
✓ Smaller
✓
Watch Out: Avoid These Three Errors
Parallel branches don't get "weaker" current — each branch gets full source voltage.
KCL and KVL are universal — both apply to any circuit, not just parallel or series.
What Comes Next: Electric Power
sec-19-4: Electric Power
- How much power does each component dissipate?
- Three forms:
, , - Why transmission lines use high voltage
Power analysis applies to both series and parallel circuits.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Parallel Circuits