Mesh analysis (or the mesh current method) is a method that is used to solve planar circuits for the currents (and indirectly the voltages) at any place in the circuit. Planar circuits are circuits that can be drawn on a plane surface with no wires crossing each other. A more general technique, called loop analysis (with the corresponding network variables called loop currents) can be applied to any circuit, planar or not. Mesh analysis and loop analysis both make use of Kirchhoff’s voltage law to arrive at a set of equations guaranteed to be solvable if the circuit has a solution. Mesh analysis is usually easier to use when the circuit is planar, compared to loop analysis.
Mesh analysis works by arbitrarily assigning mesh currents in the
essential meshes (also referred to as independent meshes). An essential
mesh is a loop in the circuit that does not contain any other loop.
A mesh current is a current that loops around the essential mesh and
the equations are set solved in terms of them. A mesh current may not
correspond to any physically flowing current, but the physical currents
are easily found from them. It is usual practice to have all the mesh currents loop in the same
direction. This helps prevent errors when writing out the equations. The
convention is to have all the mesh currents looping in a clockwise direction.
Solving for mesh currents instead of directly applying Kirchhoff's current law and Kirchhoff's voltage law can greatly reduce the amount of calculation required. This is because
there are fewer mesh currents than there are physical branch currents.
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