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Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL)

Kirchhoff's voltage law: the sum of all voltages around any closed loop equals zero.
Fundamental to circuit analysis and mesh equations.

The Formula

ΣV = 0 (around any closed loop)

Kirchhoff's voltage law states that the sum of all voltage rises and drops around any closed loop in a circuit equals zero.

This is based on the conservation of energy — a charge that travels around a loop returns to its starting potential.

Variables

SymbolMeaning
ΣVAlgebraic sum of all voltages in the loop (Volts, V)
V_sourceVoltage rise from a power source (positive)
V_dropVoltage drop across a component (negative)

Sign Convention

  • Voltage rises (e.g., going from − to + of a battery) are positive
  • Voltage drops (e.g., going through a resistor in the direction of current) are negative

Example 1

A loop has a 12 V battery and two resistors. The first resistor drops 7 V. What is the voltage across the second resistor?

ΣV = 0

+12 V - 7 V - V₂ = 0

V₂ = 12 - 7

V₂ = 5 V

Example 2

A circuit loop has a 9 V battery and three resistors: R₁ = 100 Ω, R₂ = 150 Ω, R₃ = 50 Ω. Find the current and voltage drop across each resistor.

Total resistance: R_total = 100 + 150 + 50 = 300 Ω

Current: I = V / R = 9 / 300 = 0.03 A

V₁ = I × R₁ = 0.03 × 100 = 3 V

V₂ = I × R₂ = 0.03 × 150 = 4.5 V

V₃ = I × R₃ = 0.03 × 50 = 1.5 V

Check: 9 - 3 - 4.5 - 1.5 = 0 ✓

V₁ = 3 V, V₂ = 4.5 V, V₃ = 1.5 V (total = 9 V)

When to Use It

Use Kirchhoff's voltage law when you need to:

  • Find unknown voltages across components in a loop
  • Set up mesh equations for solving complex circuits
  • Verify that voltage drops in a circuit are consistent
  • Analyse circuits with multiple voltage sources

KVL applies to every closed loop in a circuit, no matter how many loops exist.

Combined with KCL, it provides all the equations needed to solve any linear circuit.


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