EMF (Electromotive Force):
EMF is the maximum potential difference between the terminals of a cell when no current is being drawn from it. It represents the total energy supplied per unit charge by the cell.
Terminal Voltage:
Terminal voltage is the potential difference between the terminals of the cell when it is supplying current. Due to internal resistance \( r \), some voltage is lost inside the cell. Hence:
\[ \text{Terminal voltage} = \text{EMF} - Ir \]
Difference:
\[ \text{EMF} \geq \text{Terminal voltage} \quad (\text{Equality only when } I = 0) \]
Given: Two cells of EMFs \( E_1 \) and \( E_2 \), and internal resistances \( r_1 \) and \( r_2 \), connected in parallel.
Objective: Derive the expression for equivalent EMF \( E \) and equivalent internal resistance \( r \).
Solution:
Since the cells are connected in parallel, their terminal voltages must be equal. Let:
\[ E_1 - I_1 r_1 = E_2 - I_2 r_2 = V \]
Let the total current be \( I = I_1 + I_2 \), and for the equivalent cell:
\[ V = E - Ir \]
From the current expressions:
\[ I_1 = \frac{E_1 - V}{r_1}, \quad I_2 = \frac{E_2 - V}{r_2} \]
Total current becomes:
\[ I = \frac{E_1 - V}{r_1} + \frac{E_2 - V}{r_2} \Rightarrow I = \frac{E_1}{r_1} + \frac{E_2}{r_2} - V\left(\frac{1}{r_1} + \frac{1}{r_2} \right) \]
Substitute into \( V = E - Ir \):
\[ V = E - r\left( \frac{E_1}{r_1} + \frac{E_2}{r_2} - V\left( \frac{1}{r_1} + \frac{1}{r_2} \right) \right) \]
Solve for \( E \) and \( r \), and we get:
Equivalent EMF:
\[ E = \frac{\frac{E_1}{r_1} + \frac{E_2}{r_2}}{\frac{1}{r_1} + \frac{1}{r_2}} \]
Equivalent Internal Resistance:
\[ \frac{1}{r} = \frac{1}{r_1} + \frac{1}{r_2} \]
Two cells of emf 1V and 2V and internal resistance 2 \( \Omega \) and 1 \( \Omega \), respectively, are connected in series with an external resistance of 6 \( \Omega \). The total current in the circuit is \( I_1 \). Now the same two cells in parallel configuration are connected to the same external resistance. In this case, the total current drawn is \( I_2 \). The value of \( \left( \frac{I_1}{I_2} \right) \) is \( \frac{x}{3} \). The value of x is 1cm.


For the circuit shown above, the equivalent gate is:
