Electronic – Are designation of voltage current quantities with upper and lower case letters universal
currentvoltage
Below shows designation of voltage current quantities with upper lower case letters:
RMS value for instance is indicated with upper case letter with small subscript.
Is this above table universally accepted? Is there a standard?
Best Answer
The designation of voltages and currents as shown in the picture you added were part of the old IEC 148 (or IEC 60148:1963) standard, which was superseded by IEC 60748-1:1984 in 1984 (current revision is 2002): these recommendations are now probably part of this last standard. I saw them for the first time long ago, in the "General" section of a Philips Transmitting Tubes Manual: below I have added few scans from a more (but not so much...) recent Philips manual.
Consider an initially uncharged capacitor. Now slam in a large current, that causes its voltage to rise. Now let the current decrease, and gradually become zero, this means the rate of rise of voltage will slow down and eventually the voltage will stop rising.
What I have just described there is the first quadrant of a sine wave voltage starting at zero, and a cosine wave current starting at max and falling to zero.
What the current does, the voltage does a quarter cycle later. The current leads the voltage.
It seems that whenever people talk about power, they are only really
concerned with current and not voltage
Ignorant people perhaps, but every competent electrical engineer knows that both voltage and current must be taken into account.
Although the small-signal voltage gain of the emitter follower is
slightly less than 1, the small signal current gain is normally
greater than 1.
There is no discrepancy here. The authors are pointing out that if there is current gain then voltage gain is not required to increase power. So the myth they are trying to dispel is that you can't have power gain without voltage gain - exactly the opposite of what you think people are concerned about.
One explanation I can think of is that there can be voltage across an
open circuit, so increasing that voltage would theoretically increase
power
If the output is open circuit then it will draw no current so there cannot be any power gain. However it may still be useful to consider the voltage gain if that voltage can be maintained with a load.
In some circuits (eg. video amplifier) the source and load impedances are matched, resulting in half of the output voltage and power being lost in the source. In this case you would normally only consider the voltage gain under load (so a video amp with open circuit voltage gain of 2 is actually a unity gain buffer).
In others (eg. audio amplifier) the load impedance is normally much higher than the source impedance, so the voltage gain remains (almost) constant whether driving the load or open circuit. If the load impedance is reduced then it will draw more current and power at the same voltage. This is not important for low level signals so usually only the voltage is considered. The output power of an audio power amplifier is very important, so speaker impedance is always considered - but output voltage and current are rarely mentioned.
Best Answer
The designation of voltages and currents as shown in the picture you added were part of the old IEC 148 (or IEC 60148:1963) standard, which was superseded by IEC 60748-1:1984 in 1984 (current revision is 2002): these recommendations are now probably part of this last standard. I saw them for the first time long ago, in the "General" section of a Philips Transmitting Tubes Manual: below I have added few scans from a more (but not so much...) recent Philips manual.